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Submission + - How Madefire is changing the visual grammar of comics (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "When you read a comic book or graphic novel on your tablet device, you're usually looking at a static reproduction of a print page, not a 'born digital' creation with serious interactivity. Madefire, a new startup in Emeryville, CA, is working to change that with the release today of its new iPad reader and comic-book authoring tool. Featuring seven original titles at launch — including one from Watchmen creator Dave Gibbons — the Madefire platform largely abandons traditional panel layouts in favor of 'sequences' in which the action progresses through the addition of image layers, as well as sound effects and music. 'We want to make people look at the fabric of storytelling—left to right, top to bottom—and break that fabric,' says Madefire founder Ben Wolstenholme. The company is also avoiding well-known superhero titles in favor of new characters and storylines. 'This century needs its new creations and its new myths and legacies,' says chief creative officer Liam Sharp, a veteran of X-Men, Spider-Man, Spawn, and other well-known traditional series."

Comment Re:Nothing. (Score 1) 400

When I saw primary phone I said IOS, but it's not my primary phone! My land line is! WOW, thanks for helping me think again. I feel so much more connected not my reality now. Which is so pathetic, because it's true.

Comment Google is doing a good thing - mostly (Score 4, Interesting) 69

We can argue the details of security from now to doomsday. It's a good thing that Google is doing this. Except it's of limited value. As has been pointed out in reference to the Flame attack, State sponsored hacking is very hard to detect. Google might be able to detect some, but how many? And when does Google encounter a conflict of interest? What happens then, and will we know? This is one reason I like the existence of things like Bing and Yahoo Axis, I get to spread things around. No, it's not a cure all and I'm aware that I still can be tracked, but I am raising the price (effort, etc) needed to get things on me.

We're back to the price of Freedom is Eternal Vigilance. Some things don't change in the digital world. Politics didn't, Sex did. Go figure.

This comment will not be saved until you click the Submit button below.

Comment This brings money into Kiribati (Score 2, Insightful) 365

Kiribati is the small nation that includes Gardner Island. A US Navy expedition into the area would pump money into the local economy. This sort of expedition is often encouraged by local governments. The military is a diplomatic tool as much as it is anything else. Considering the shifting politics of the region keeping a good relationship with a small but well placed country could bring significant benefits in time of crisis. For historical reference Tarawa, of the Battle of Tarawa, is the capital of Kiribati.

sorry for the double post, but this time I am logged in.

Comment Linux?? What has Linux to do with this?? (Score 1) 627

IBM's action are about controlling the behavior of people who may have access to IBM Intellectual Property. Anytime any pieces of information moves they want to know who moved it, why, when and where; and a complete list of everyone else who might be able to see it after it was moved. To try to understand this in terms of OSes is pointless, the proper metaphor is movie and music piracy. They are seeking to control how their IP can be copied or distributed.

Linux is irrelevant. It's like fretting over what brand of tire is on the get-away car.

Comment I'm Dad -- what fucking job? (Score 1) 185

One of the issues that haunts me is that I haven't had a honest job since '92. With the employment issues being what they are, why does /. assume that it's following is employed? I'm a stay at home Dad, does that not matter here either?

I go to the Scientific American web site and fill out their questionnaire and it doesn't have an "homemaker" or even "other" option.

Does this show that even on /. if you don't scrambling after the almighty dollar you don't exit.

Comment Teach the kid, not the language (Score 1) 799

I've taught programming, part time in an elementary setting, for years, and have been a real live stay at home dad for almost 20 years. I know code and kids. Kids learn people first, things later. So teach what *you* are passionate about. A kid will spot bullshit a mile away. You can trust that your little brother knows you better than you would like. Your little brother isn't going to be learning programming, he will be learning what you like. It's the "what you like" part that is most important.

Don't worry about what language to use, all languages suck about the same amount, just in different ways. C is fine, kids have a wonderful ability with language, any language. Any kid under 14 (puberty is the dividing line) or so will pick up the syntax of any language in a few weeks. Arbitrary and weird is fine, they just go with it. In my experience kids can learn either top down or bottom up, but they have a more or less fixed attention span. You have something like 20 - 40 minutes before he will start to get antsy. (YMMV) Regular times for set amounts of time work best. He knows that Monday at 6 big brother will give him a lesson and answer that question that has been bugging him for days, or years or centuries, they're all about the same. If in 6 months he would rather find something else to do, then consider dropping it. But remember!! The discipline in a 12 year olds life is external, not internal! That really doesn't start kicking in until HIgh School.

One thing that will kill this is forgetting that he is 12, below a certain but unknown age kids just can't get certain things. You just don't know what, exactly. Just because you got it at 12 doesn't mean he will. He may get different things. Then they just go to sleep and wake up and suddenly get it. They will often deny that they ever didn't get it, it is now natural and part of them. It's magic and frustrating as hell.

Comment What does he have to ask? (Score 1) 1021

If the teacher needs to ask this question maybe he shouldn't be teaching this course. My idea would be for him to go to his local library and read all of their SciFi collection. Then go the the next one and read anything not in the first. As a rule the librarians will keep decent stuff on the shelf. After that, it's just lit.

Censorship

Submission + - Apple's new MacBooks have built-in copy protection (appleinsider.com)

raque writes: "Appleinsider is reporting that the new MacBooks/MacBookPro's have built in copy protection Quote "Apple's new MacBook lines include a form of digital copy protection that will prevent protected media, such as DRM-infused iTunes movies, from playing back on devices that aren't compliant with the new priority protection measures" . Arstechnica is also reporting on the same issue HERE

Is this the deal they had to make to get NBC back?
Is this a deal breaker for Apple or will fans just ignore it to get their hands on the pretty new machines?
Is this a new opportunity for Linux? And what happened to Jobs not liking DRM?"

Space

Magnetic Portals Connect Sun and Earth 235

MaxwellEdison writes "Scientists have discovered evidence of magnetic portals connecting the Earth and the Sun every 8 minutes. 'Several speakers at the Workshop have outlined how FTEs form: On the dayside of Earth (the side closest to the sun), Earth's magnetic field presses against the sun's magnetic field. Approximately every eight minutes, the two fields briefly merge or "reconnect," forming a portal through which particles can flow. The portal takes the form of a magnetic cylinder about as wide as Earth. The European Space Agency's fleet of four Cluster spacecraft and NASA's five THEMIS probes have flown through and surrounded these cylinders, measuring their dimensions and sensing the particles that shoot through.'"
Microsoft

Windows Azure Offers Developers Iron-Clad Lock-in 227

snydeq writes "Microsoft's move to the cloud is certain to create a whole new kind of developer partner, Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister writes. But as much as Microsoft ISVs will likely go along with the shift to Windows Azure to keep revenue streams going, the kind of lock-in they will experience will be worlds away from what they face today. Rather than being able to ignore the new version of a key framework, developers will have no other option than to update their code to suit Microsoft's latest platform. That kind of lock-in will leave customers in the lurch, subject to their vendors' bottom lines, as ISVs that can't afford to rework code to keep up with Microsoft's latest platform will begin dropping services, and customers will have little choice but to accept the new terms of service their vendors send along."

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