All posts by Scott Meisner

Oscar nods are announced; ‘Avatar’ and ‘The Hurt Locker’ 9 nods each

This year’s Oscar nominations are in!  Let’s have a look see…

Best Picture: Avatar, The Blind Side, District 9, An Education, The Hurt Locker, Inglourious Basterds, Precious, A Serious Man, Up, Up in the Air

A bunch of these films deserve the win.  However, there can be only one, and my prediction lies with The Hurt Locker.

Best Director
Kathryn Bigelow, The Hurt Locker
James Cameron, Avatar
Lee Daniels, Precious
Jason Reitman, Up in the Air
Quentin Tarantino, Inglourious Basterds

As much as I want Quentin Tarantino to take this category for Basterds, I have a feeling James Cameron will reign once again.

Best Actor
Jeff Bridges, Crazy Heart
George Clooney, Up in the Air
Colin Firth, A Single Man
Morgan Freeman, Invictus
Jeremy Renner, The Hurt Locker

You know who deserves a big win here?  Jeremy Renner.  And he will get it.

Best Supporting Actor
Matt Damon, Invictus
Woody Harrelson, The Messenger
Christopher Plummer, The Last Station
Stanley Tucci, The Lovely Bones
Christoph Waltz, Inglourious Basterds

Christoph Waltz.  Period.

Look after the break for all nominations and more predictions.  The 82nd Academy Awards, hosted by Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin, airs March 7 at 8PM on ABC. Continue reading Oscar nods are announced; ‘Avatar’ and ‘The Hurt Locker’ 9 nods each

Bridging the gap between digital and the physical by making content “graspable”

PhD student Fabian Hemmert asks, “How can we make digital content graspable for us, for humans?”  How do we get from the physical to the digital?  He introduces three conceptual cell phone models (“mobile-shaped phone boxes,” really) that could theoretically help bridge this gap that has yet to be conquered.  The “weight-shifting mobile” uses a iron weight that moves around, giving the user a sense of physical mass.  For example, when you’re exploring your way through a city using Google Maps, the weight can direct you in the right direction as it shifts the center of gravity inside the phone, making you feelwhich way to turn.  Next up is the “shape-changing mobile.”  Say you have a wide collection of eBooks on your device.  If you’re reading a short twenty page story, the device will make itself thin; if you’re reading a lengthy Harry Potter novel, the device will expand, making the experience more realistic, as if you were holding a thick book.  It can also change it’s shape to customize the grasp, have the device lean towards you when in use, etc.  The “living mobile phone” is downright strange: this model has a “breath” and “heartbeat.”  It’s meant to make the device seem organic in your pocket.  In standby mode, the phone “breaths” up and down; when you receive an alert, it’s “heart rate” increases and the up and down motions speed up.  To calm it down?  “Pat it behind the ears.”

Hemmert’s ideas are innovative andinteresting, though I feel the implementation of such technologies will remain far-out research assignments for the forseeable future.  He ends the demonstration with this postulation: “Not humans should get more technical in the future; rather than that, technology a bit more human.”  Intriguing, intellectual, and plain ‘ol creepy if you ask me.

[Via InformationAestheticsEngadget]

Microsoft enters the world of info-tagging with MS Tags app

A “tag” is a multicolored barcode that can be placed on (or in) a number of products and services, such as product packages or magazines.  The Microsoft Tag application (which will be available for download on a number of handsets, including Windows Phones, the iPhone, and others) takes a picture of the unique barcode stamped on a product and relays all kinds of information about the particular item at hand back to you.  Tags can push all types of information to you including websites, pictures, and video.  “It’s the hyperlink in the physical world,” says a Microsoft rep.  He also says MS will not charge for the app or for companies to place barcodes on their products.  This is fun and all, but Microsoft is late to the game.  I understand that the technologies are different (Tags can lead you to specific videos and other info), but heck–Google Goggles can search for a product’s information without barcodes!

[Via CNET; Engadget]

Concept vid reveals what Google Chrome tablet may look like

Watch out, iPad.  Google Chrome OS-inspired tablets are on the way and they are (conceptually) looking real good.  On Monday Glenn Murphy, Google Chrome’s designer, posted this UI concept video and a handful of stills on Google’s Chromium site.  Though it’s only a mockup of sorts, it proves the Google is working hard to make Google Chrome OS (and devices they will eventually run on) a fully functional, multi-tasking beast of an experience.  Since Chrome OS is at least one year away from deployment, this is essentially Google showing us how they are experimenting with several different UI manipulation techniques and appearences.

[Via TheChromeSource; Gizmodo]

Logitech app brings remote keyboard and mouse to the iPhone

Logitech has gone ahead and turned all iPhones into portable keyboards and mice for computers.  Sure, it’s not the first company to do it, but it’s here and the execution is top notch.  And there’s this: it’s absolutely free.  It uses WiFi to wireless connect to your PC or Mac, and the text you type is displayed on the screen, removing the annoyance of looking up at the computer every second.  Additional features include:

  • Multi-touch trackpad with the option for two or three mouse buttons
  • Two-finger scrolling
  • Keyboard with Control, Alt, Command/Windows keys
  • On-screen text display while typing
  • Show or hide the keyboard at any time
  • Trackpad and keyboard are available in landscape and portrait modes
  • It’s available for the iPhone and iPod touch at the App Store.  And did I mention it’s free?

    [Via Logitech; Engadget]

    This video game requires you to SCREAM to advance

    Created by Glen Forrester for Global Game Jam 2010, GNILLEY was originally intended to be a video game concerned with “pitch and color” but instead it became “all about yelling at everything.”  I’m going to save my breath and just have you watch the video demonstration for yourself.  It’s wild.  (Team Forrester ended up winning Most Original Game at the competition!)

    [Via Engadget]

    Asimo stars in “Living with Robots” documentary

    Our favorite robot Asimo stars in a Honda short-film documentary called “Living with Robots.”  The docu “investigates humankind’s keen interest in robots and how robots can challenge the impossible by saving lives while also holding the promise to become more integrated and helpful in daily life.”  In case you never heard of Honda’s ASIMO (Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility), he’s “the world’s most advanced humanoid robot, and the company’s commitment to researching and developing bipedal mobility and how the research improves technologies across the company.”  You can take a peek at the trailer for it above.  If it pings your interest, the full length film was shown at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and will hopefully find its way to DVD and Blu Ray soon.  Full PR after the break.

    Isn’t that final sequence chilling, when Asimo looks at himself in the mirror?  He very naturally tilts his head inquisitively, as if he were human.  Help me realize our future: will robots take over the world (ie. iRobot) or will they develop to help maintain and better our lives?

    [Via Engadget]

    Continue reading Asimo stars in “Living with Robots” documentary

    iPad keynote event…in adjectives

    When Steve Jobs hosts an Apple keynote event it’s a given that someone will splice together all of the superfluous adjectives used to describe the new product or service at hand.  Last week’s announcement of the iPad is no exception, and this time that someone is Neil Curtis.  Curtis says all adjectives used in this video were taken from the iPad keynote alone, and no scene is ever repeated.  Magical!

    [Via Gizmodo]

    THE BEGINNING OF THE END

    Lost: The Final Season is almost here.  To celebrate the anticipation I will be adding new Lost-related content to this post leading up to the premiere event on Tuesday, February 2.

    UPDATE: Lost: The Final Season starts tonight!  Get pumped by watching  two new trailers, the second of which includes a gun-toting Claire and makes you believe Juliet did the deed.  Check it out and see what I mean.  Following the two trailers is a Lost recap of all important events ranging from season one to season five, as reenacted by an extended Italian family (it’s hysterical!).

     

    Tons more Lost-related content can be found after the break. Continue reading THE BEGINNING OF THE END