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Comment Re:Starship Troopers (Score 1) 391

Not quite. I should preface this by saying it's been many years since I've talked with this particular person, but when I was in high school, a friend of mine joined the military in a Psy Ops role. His training had him driving around in a hummer with speakers in the back, with the intention of blasting whatever sort of psychologically damaging message out on the battlefield. Apparently, one of their most common sound tracks was the sound of a baby crying. According to my friend, this was supposed to be a very difficult sound for people to hear over long periods of time, and would be used to stress out and demoralize the troops. My guess is that, in this case, they are using other methods of persuasion that are less blatant, but still designed to be exceptionally persuasive. I wouldn't imagine, however, that this is anything further than what a normal lobbyist could do.

TL:DR version: Less psychic, more psychology.
Businesses

Secret Plan To Kill Wikileaks With FUD Leaked 246

An anonymous reader writes "Three information security consultancies with links to US spy agencies cooked up a dirty tricks campaign late last year to destroy Wikileaks by exploiting its perceived weaknesses, reads a presentation released by the whistleblowers' (pdf) organization that it claimed to be from the conspirators. Consultants at US defense contractors Palantir Technologies, Berico Technologies and HBGary proposed to lawyers for a desperate Bank of America an alliance that would work to discredit the whistleblowers' website using a divide and conquer approach. Since the plan was hatched, disgruntled volunteers mentioned in the PDF broke away from Wikileaks, financial institutions withdrew services, [Jacob ] Appelbaum was harassed by the US government, and Amazon denied service to Wikileaks' website."

Comment Re:You see? They *are* changing their business mod (Score 1) 369

Actually, singles sales are way up, given that people can now buy the songs they want off albums instead of having to buy the entire album. From this article (first one i could find):

Album sales have dropped for four of the last five years, and while sales of digital singles are booming, that has not yet been enough to offset the drop. Music companies sold more than 350 million singles last year, a jump of 150 percent over the previous year's total.

Comment Re:Cars? (Score 5, Insightful) 532

I'd also argue that inception was impressive because several of the special effects rely on physical techniques. The spinning hallway really was spinning during filming, which might not seem that important, but it means that we have a real system in place for rules. Gravity is never lost during that shot, which often happens in pure CG special effects. everyone's movements happen as naturally as we'd expect them to in that situation. When you replace with CG, you're likely to forget to add small details that the audience will notice consciously or subconsciously, breaking the experience.

Comment Re:splitting hair definitions (Score 1) 111

The reason why the origin of the star is so important is that it came with a planet. This means that we are not the only galaxy to contain planets. This isn't that surprising, but now we have at least one example to prove we're not just a strange one-off galaxy. So yes, it's a part of our galaxy now, and aside from it's odd orbit, it's a pretty standard star. However, its taught us we're not special, which is a very good thing.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 313

The obvious answer is testing. Calculators were easier to check for cheating, and had a somewhat singular purpose. the TI-programming ability pushed this a bit, but even then, it wasn't hard to limit what it could be used for.

The long answer is that I had (still have) a TI-83 that fell out of my locker every day from 6th grade until 12th grade, and it never broke. It was built like a tank. It fit in my pocket, it never had a dead battery that couldn't be replaced for cheap, it never needed any cords. I think the price is obscene these days, but honestly, it's lasted so long that the cost per day of use is around 1 penny. That thing was quality.

Comment Re:Same thing happened at Walt Disney Concert Hall (Score 4, Informative) 218

You've given one example, which is a building by Frank Gehry. He's an architect who made his millions by converting software made to develop jet fighters into "architecture". Is it any wonder his buildings attack people?

I am a practicing architect, so please, let me fill you in. Architects take classes on sun angles and reflected light. Understanding how to make use of and control natural sunlight is a major part of modern architecture. I counter your example with a modern building designed by Steven Holl (a much more impressive architect IMHO). If you note on one of the diagrams, the building has been designed to strategicly filter light into different areas of the school based on certain landmark days. No death rays here.

Comment Re:Valve should get its priorities straight... (Score 1) 141

You'll be waiting for a very long time for a Linux client. There will never be a native client until Linux's market share on home boxes reaches a level comparable with either the mac or windows OS. It's simple economics and the reason why, until now, that apple's gaming scene has been anemic. No point in spending money if you won't make it back.

Comment Re:FX always trump story. (Score 1) 521

I should have added that it's up to the writer/director to choose what's appropriate for the story. What I'm trying to say is that the bad artist blames his medium, because if the medium doesn't work for their work, then they chose the wrong medium.

On a side note, I would like to point out that the lord of the rings has been put out in a film form that was (at least according to IMDB) well recieved. It just took a few films.

Comment Re:FX always trump story. (Score 1) 521

And how many cinemas are going to show films that fall outside of the typical lengths?

Do you really have to ask?

And the limitations on length mean that too many writers for features lazily fall back on formulaic story structures.

Until you provide examples, I have no way to refute this. But I would love to, so please indulge me.

They are showing things that would never have been approved as cinematic releases.

Please indulge me on this. I highly doubt HBO has come close to the limits of what has been shown on screen.

Comment Re:FX always trump story. (Score 1) 521

Feature film is too limiting of a medium? For the love of god... that's a baseless statement. A feature film is a format. It's usually between 90 and 150 minutes. Even then, they don't have to be. There are films that take far less than 90 minutes, and others that take much longer. It's up to the writer and the director to figure out how to use those minutes wisely. You could argue that the film industry is too restrictive, and I would agree that many major companies aren't willing to take the risks required to allow for freedom. However, this is a problem in television (HBO included) as well.

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