Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘entertainment’ category: Page 111

Apr 27, 2016

Approaching the Unknown: Movie Trailer

Posted by in categories: entertainment, space travel

Captain William D. Stanaforth (Mark Strong) is on a one-way solo mission, taking humanity’s first steps toward colonizing Mars. Although the entire world is watching him, he is completely alone in a dark and distant sea of stars. Stanaforth rockets bravely through space facing insurmountable odds, but as the journey takes a toll on his life-sustaining systems, he is forced to make impossible choices that threaten his sanity, mission and very existence.

Read more

Apr 25, 2016

The Museum of Modern Art gets into virtual reality

Posted by in categories: entertainment, virtual reality

Works from the Sundance Film Festival are making a pit stop in Manhattan for MoMA’s Slithering Screens series.

Read more

Apr 23, 2016

How Facebook plans to take over the world

Posted by in category: entertainment

Maybe Zuckerberg can be the new Goldfinger in a James Bond movie:


Social network went from digital directory for college kids to communications behemoth – and it’s planning for prosperity with its global takeover.

Read more

Apr 19, 2016

A Sci-Fi Short Film HD: “EXIT PLAN” — Directed by Richard Oakes

Posted by in categories: entertainment, media & arts

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TLWQWhVhY4&index=7&…34A498DFE2

Enjoy this independent futuristic Sci-Fi short film project by Director Richard Oakes of Dark Fable Media. After the golden age of man and machine, humanity is split into two classes, The ultra rich industry and the surplus. However, neither side can control the bleak fate of the earth.

Shot over 4 days on a production budget of £1800.

Continue reading “A Sci-Fi Short Film HD: ‘EXIT PLAN’ — Directed by Richard Oakes” »

Apr 19, 2016

Playing VR Game ‘Mars 2030’, Which Uses NASA Data to Explore the Red Planet

Posted by in categories: entertainment, space, virtual reality

Playing the new experience from Fusion, NASA and MIT.

Read more

Apr 18, 2016

Scientists have finally made a substance that’s even stronger than graphene

Posted by in categories: entertainment, materials

Much like in comic books, scientists are on an endless quest to discover or create the strongest, most durable substance possible. Theories about how to go about that have long circulated, but nobody has been able to overcome the challenge—until now. A team of Austrian researchers has finally worked out a way to stabilize what they are calling the strongest of all known materials, an exotic form of carbon called carbyne.

Read more

Apr 14, 2016

James Cameron confirms he is making four Avatar sequels

Posted by in category: entertainment

We’d already heard rumors that James Cameron had found three sequels a little limiting for his Avatar follow-ups, and on stage at CinemaCon today he made it official. The filmmaker announced that no less than four new sequels to his 3D epic are in the works, with the first hitting theaters in 2018.

The filmmaker discussed the many ways in which he is expanding the world — a theme park with Disney in in the works, and his company has signed a deal with Dark Horse Comics for graphic novel spin-offs — but the movies themselves are obviously the biggest component. The Avatar sequels have been a moving target since he first announced he was working on them, and Cameron has since assembled what amounts to a screenwriting superteam to break the story for the various films. As it stands, the second film in the series will be coming out in the holiday season of 2018, with the subsequent films arriving in 2020, 2022, and 2023.

“It’s going to be a true epic saga that’s told in this rich and complex world,” Cameron assured the theater owners, while also taking the moment on stage to voice his support for exclusive theatrical windows for movie releases — a hot topic at this year’s show thanks to the recent emergence of Sean Parker’s The Screening Room initiative, which would allow audiences to rent first-run movies from their living room. As Cameron framed it, technology threatening movie theaters was nothing new. “There’s always been some kind of threat to the theater-going experience,” he said, “but we’ve always answered that threat in the same way. By being great, and showmanship.”

Continue reading “James Cameron confirms he is making four Avatar sequels” »

Apr 14, 2016

Ghost In The Shell Begins Production

Posted by in category: entertainment

While she’s still in the thick of her publicity tour for Captain America: Winter Soldier, Scarlett Johansson’s next big genre project is getting underway.

Today, Paramount Pictures announced that The Ghost in the Shell has started filming, providing fans with their first look at the anticipated adaptation.

The film is based onShirowMasamune’s cyberpunkmanga of the same name.

Read more

Apr 14, 2016

The question of how exactly we experience the world through our perception of consciousness is one that’s long intrigued scientists and philosophers

Posted by in categories: entertainment, neuroscience

And at its core are two divergent hypotheses.

On the one hand, it could be that consciousness exists as a constant, uninterrupted stream of perception, like how it feels to watch a movie. You sit down with your popcorn and experience a film from beginning to end in one continuous flow, unaware of any segmentation or breakup as you go.

But another hypothesis of consciousness reflects what a film technically is: a series of individual frames of time stitched together into a reel that – when played back – appear seamless. So which is it? Is consciousness a seamless film, or is it a reel composed of discrete moments?

Continue reading “The question of how exactly we experience the world through our perception of consciousness is one that’s long intrigued scientists and philosophers” »

Apr 14, 2016

Consciousness occurs in ‘time slices’ lasting only milliseconds, study suggests

Posted by in categories: entertainment, neuroscience

The question of how exactly we experience the world through our perception of consciousness is one that’s long intrigued scientists and philosophers. And at its core are two divergent hypotheses.

On the one hand, it could be that consciousness exists as a constant, uninterrupted stream of perception, like how it feels to watch a movie. You sit down with your popcorn and experience a film from beginning to end in one continuous flow, unaware of any segmentation or breakup as you go.

But another hypothesis of consciousness reflects what a film technically is: a series of individual frames of time stitched together into a reel that – when played back – appear seamless. So which is it? Is consciousness a seamless film, or is it a reel composed of discrete moments?

Continue reading “Consciousness occurs in ‘time slices’ lasting only milliseconds, study suggests” »