All posts by Scott Meisner

Music video: Dan Black – “Symphonies” (Remix) (Featuring Kid Cudi)

Check out Dan Black’s music video for the remix to his original single “Symphonies.”  The song is DOPE and the video lives up to it by combining retro and futuristic references, making for a visually unique partner for the track.  You can download “Symphonies” (Remix) and the music video at iTunes.

Black is a UK-based electronica artist whose first album was released digitally to iTunes this December in the States.  UN includes the original recording of “Symphonies” plus eleven other tracks including “U + Me =” and “Alone.”  It is expected to be made available in physical form on February 16.  Also starting this month Black will begin touring in the U.S. and Canada.

[Via DatNewCudi; Wiki]

Tom Cruise & J.J. Abrams join forces again for Mission: Impossible IV

This Tuesday Paramount Pictures announced that actor Tom Cruise will star in the next installment of the Mission: Impossible series.  J.J. Abrams returns as well, this time as producer not director.  Josh Applebaum and Andre Nemec are penning the script that’s based on a story arc formulated by Cruise and Abrams.  Mission: Impossible IV is due out in theatres Memorial Day weekend in 2011.

[Via The Canadian Press]

See Avatar in 4D (in Korea only!)

In Korea, 3D just doesn’t cut it.  By adding an extra dimension to the epic Avatar 4D movieplexes “use more than 30 effects during the 3D film’s 162 minute run, including moving seats, smells of explosives, sprinkling water, laser lights and wind.”  If you’ve experienced Shrek 4D at Disney then you probably have an idea of what Avatar in 4D would be like.  In fact, Tom Oh of 20th Century Fox Korea refers to Avatar in 4D as a “ride” and calls the Korean 4D plex “the first in the world that fully offers five-sense experiences with a movie title.”  Avatar in IMAX 3D was definitely enough of a trip for me.  I feel like the addition of moving seats and shots of water to the face would just distract me (not further immerse me) from Pandora and its spectacular inhabitants.  What say you?

[Via Variety]

Google responds to user feedback, makes Buzz a bit more private

[new_Buzz_startup.png]

As soon as the announcement and release of Google Buzz hit the masses, users quickly recognized a “security flaw” in the service.  Google shares the final diagnosis like this: “In particular there’s been concern from some people who thought their contacts were being made public without their knowledge (in particular the lists of people they follow, and the people following them). In addition, others felt they had too little control over who could follow them and were upset that they lacked the ability to block people who didn’t yet have public profiles from following them.”  So what have they done to combat contact privacy issues?

1. More visible option to not show followers/people you follow on your public profile

2. Ability to block anyone who starts following you

3. More clarity on which of your followers/people you follow can appear on your public profile

In addition to these changes, Google has also revamped the “start-up experience,” the initial ‘Welcome to Google Buzz’ screen.  An auto-suggest model replaces the auto-follow model, allowing the user to pick and choose who they want to follow instead of Buzz automatically adding their contacts and chat buddies to their follow list.  Also, “If you don’t want to share the lists of people who are following you and people you are following publicly on your profile, you can opt out at any time from the [new and improved] edit profile page.”  Some other changes include: “Buzz will no longer connect your public Picasa Web Albums and Google Reader shared items automatically” and now there’s a Buzz tab in GMail Settings where “you’ll be able to hide Buzz from Gmail or disable it completely.”  All these changes in its first week, it’s quite impressive; Google is definitely taking to heart loud user feedback.  And all of this seems to be resulting in a better Buzz experience so far.

[Via GoogleBlog, here & here]

Google Buzz is Twitter on steroids

Google’s latest foray into the social networking business has everyone atwitter; so what’s all the buzz about?  Google Buzz is a new way to share updates with friends.  It goes beyond the standard “status update” from Facebook and breaks free from a 140-character tweet from Twitter, allowing you to quickly and easily share content across the Internet.  Buzz is built into Gmail.  If you have a Gmail account you are already set up for the service; your current list of contacts and people you chat with the most automatically become your followers.  That last word strikes a familiar chord, doesn’t it?  Buzz is very similar to Twitter; you follow people, people follow you, you post updates, and so on.  What makes it different (and so much more expansive) is that there’s no character limit and the means of interaction with others is much more fluid.  It fosters greater interaction with the ability to share links, photos, and video.  YouTube videos can be embedded right into posts, along with pictures that can be viewed in full size and resolution.  Besides sharing your own information, you will be alerted about new posts from followers and their group of followers; Buzz recommends posts from people you’re not directly following to promote a growing community of new friends and acquaintances.  @-responses are supported, allowing you to specifically address a friend’s post.  You also have the option to connect Buzz to other accounts like Picasa, Flickr, Google Reader, and Twitter and spread your posts, pictures, and breaking news that way.  And don’t worry–you have the option to keep things private among friends or public with the Buzz community.

Google Buzz should be fully integrated into everyone’s Gmail account by now.  You’ll notice a new small tab located under the Inbox tab labeled Buzz.  Now what if you’re away from the computer and still want to buzz about stuff?  Google’s created Buzz for mobile and it’s got some intruiging features.  What’s unique about posting on your phone is that Buzz uses location-based services to pinpoint exactly where you are when you post something, allowing your followers to find you on a map.  Tagged locations do away with long/lat numbers and display the actual names of places instead.  There are four ways to access Google Buzz on your cell phone.  (1) On an iPhone or Android phone go to buzz.google.com to access a Buzz web app; it has two views: “‘Following’ view shows buzz from the people you follow, just like Google Buzz in your Gmail; ‘Nearby’ view shows public buzz that has been tagged with a location near you, and might be from people you don’t follow. From Nearby view, you can also select a specific place from the list of nearby places and view posts attached to that place.”  (2) Buzz on Google Maps for mobile, available only on Android phones, adds a new Buzz layer to the Maps application and “allows you to see buzz near you or anywhere on the map. You can post public buzz directly from the layer, and even attach a photo from your phone.”  (3) Buzz Shortcut from Google.com allows any cell phone with a browser to access Buzz. (4) The Google Voice application, available on Android phones in the quick search widget and on iPhones in the Google Mobile App, “allows you to post buzz without typing anything. Just say ‘post buzz,’ followed by whatever you’d like to post.”

Is Google Buzz going to be a success?  Will it catch on with the masses a la Facebook and Twitter?  Buzz surely has the potential to replace Twitter as a social networking tool.  At its core, Buzz is all about “start[ing] conversations about the things you find interesting” and it does it pretty well already.  I agree with Mashable when they say “if Google Wave is the future, Google Buzz is the present.”  The Google Wave beta made heads tilt in confusion, and Google thinks Buzz is an appropriate stepping stone to it.  Buzz goes beyond email and IM but it does not overstep its boundaries (aka the craziness that is Wave).  Thing is, Buzz does not feel like a transition service because it comes off as Twitter on steroids–something we’re used to, just beefier.  Buzz is already making noise; today Facebook and AOL have joined forces to allow IM users to chat with Facebook friends over the AIM client.  And Twitter should be scared, too; their 140-character limit and lack of expanding services may start to wear thin with Buzz lurking around the corner.  A potential issue for some may arise in the fact that Buzz requires Gmail sign up but to these naysayers I say so what?  Gmail is the best Internet email client out there anyway; now’s a better time than ever to jump on the bandwagon and join the Gmail community.  Because that’s what it’s becoming thanks to Buzz–one giant place to share the things you find interesting with others.

Google Buzz in Gmail, for mobile, and the launch event can be found in video form after the break, you know, if you’re into that stuff.

[Via GoogleBlog, here & here]

Continue reading Google Buzz is Twitter on steroids

Brooklyn Decker shines as SI’s 2010 Swimsuit Issue cover model

DAMN.  This year’s Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue cover model is g-g-gorgeous.  Her name’s Brooklyn Decker, she’s 22, and this is her fifth appearence in a Swimsuit Issue.

Check out a handful of pics from the photoshoot in the gallery below, and take a gander at the behind-the-scenes video.  Click here for more pictures and video.

[Via SI]

Google to offer ultra high-speed broadband network across the U.S.

Google is a search engine.  Google is a browser.  Google is a cell phone OS.  Google is an ultra high-speed broadband network.  Google is planning on launching a fiber-based 1 gigabit broadband network to homes and businesses across America at “competitive prices.”  Why are they doing this, you ask?

  • Next generation apps: We want to see what developers and users can do with ultra high-speeds, whether it’s creating new bandwidth-intensive “killer apps” and services, or other uses we can’t yet imagine.
  • New deployment techniques: We’ll test new ways to build fiber networks, and to help inform and support deployments elsewhere, we’ll share key lessons learned with the world.
  • Openness and choice: We’ll operate an “open access” network, giving users the choice of multiple service providers. And consistent with our past advocacy, we’ll manage our network in an open, non-discriminatory and transparent way.
  • In other words, this is an elaborate experiment for Google, to test the waters and see what happens when more people have access to blazingly fast Internet speeds.  They are in the game to “help make Internet access better and faster for everyone.”  The plan will be offered to “at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people” in the coming months.  If you’re interested in becoming a candidate, watch the preview video after the break and visit Google’s Fiber for Communities page.

    [Via GoogleBlog]

    Continue reading Google to offer ultra high-speed broadband network across the U.S.

    Explore the Olympic Games mountains with Street View

    In anticipation of the Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver, Team Google brings us to Whistler Mountain with Street View.  Just like you’d map out how to find a restaurant on Google Maps using Street View to precisely pick out the location, now you can search and explore the icy mountains where this month’s Winter Olympics will take place.  Explore the mountains or “get inside the games” with a constantly updating menu system that features Olympic events, medals, venues, and news.  Google’s got you covered.

    [Via GoogleBlog]