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Dec2nd

Big 3 Out of Gas

LowCommotion FTW! (Cars, Money, Politics)
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CEOs of the Big Three automakers came to Congress, tin cups in hand, to make a pitch for another $25 billion.

The first $25 billion loan for the automakers was signed into law last year for retooling. This time around, the top execs wanted no strings attached, just the money.

not an earth-shattering article, just very well written.

Dec2nd

YouTube – Musical Road, Lancaster, CA

LowCommotion FTW! (Cars, Music)
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Dec2nd

Fruit or Vegetable?

Chromium FTW! (Educational, Food)
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Is a Tomato a fruit or a vegetable? How about a cucumber?

Dec2nd

Chris’ Piss: Special Collector’s Edition

Chromium FTW! (Chris' Piss)
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This week I’d like to talk about something near and dear to our hearts: Movies.  Once upon a time you bought movies on VHS because copying those led to signal degradation and who wants that.  Then along came DVD which promised better picture quality and subsequently copies were just as pristine as the originals.  But now Blu-Ray has moved in and is starting to wage war on your wallets.

Now I’m going to talk about resolution in general. I won’t get into specifics, you can look up the wikis if you like.  The maximum film resolution for movies is approximately 4000 pixels across (They call this 4k).  Current Hi-Def standards are ~1/4 of that at 1980 pixels across. DVD resolution is ~1/4 of that at 720 pixels across. The problem is that the human eye can really only distinguish 1980 pixels at a screen size of approximately 50″ (most common living room configuration for the cost at this point).

So after all the boring specifications, where does that leave us?  Blu-Ray is not the maximum resolution out there, and a lot of studios are starting to master all of their movies at the 4k resolution (Criterion) but it is overkill when there aren’t the tv’s to support it and there won’t be anytime in the near future.  We don’t really even have the computer monitors to support it.

So what does Blu-Ray buy us? Time under the current regime of equipment restraints. How much time? I’d say at least 5 years. The thing is home theater tech in general is evolving.  Digital downloads are now becoming much more accepted. In a few years, it may not matter what media our movies come on, and this brings me to my next point.

Hey studios, WTF????? Why do you feel the need to put out 7-8 different versions of your movies now for every release? Blu-Ray 2 disc, Blu-Ray 3 disc, DVD 2 Disc, DVD 3 disc, DVD specific store bonus version some with schwag some without.  So far only 1 title I’ve seen released so far has done it right – Disney’s Sleeping Beauty.  Sad but true. $30 (which is the typical price nowadays for a Blu-Ray) bought you the Blu-Ray, the DVD & a digital copy of the movie.  Why can’t all releases be like this?

The media is cheap enough, and including these extra copies goes a long way towards getting the most value for your dollar. This way you have a dvd for the mini van, a Blu-Ray for the living room, and the digital copy for your iPod/iPhone.  I can’t stress enough that eventually it might all be digital distribution. Once fiber is commonplace and broadband is ubiquitous all of your media needs will be served via downloads.  Think about it – One massive server per household which is fed by a nice fat pipe. It feeds to all of your televisions and all of your devices.  If a drive goes down, no worries, since all your media rights will be stored online somewhere, it knows what you own and will let you redownload them accordingly, just like Steam does now for your videogames.

This could be for all new Music and all new Movies. iTunes does a heavily DRM’d version of it now. It IS the future, and we just have to make sure we’re in a good place to take advantage of that.

Dec2nd

Mystery Behind Tina Fey’s Scar Revealed

Chromium FTW! (Celebrities)
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THIS is news we need!

Dec2nd

Ars Ultimate Home Theater PC Guide: 1080p HDMI Edition

LowCommotion FTW! (Educational, Tech, TV)
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No matter what operating system you use for your HTPC, the same general concepts exist: recording and time-shifting TV are the device's most basic functions; playback and recording of DVD and Blu-ray are secondary but (perhaps) no less critical, followed by distribution of audio content and, in more ambitious setups, serving up digital media in its capacity as the whole home network's media storage center. And don't forget the ability to do mundane things like browsing the web from ten feet away on a shiny new 1080p HDTV.

Dec2nd

Geek Hotels Pass the Nerd Test

Chromium FTW! (Nerdy, Travel)
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I wonder if we’ll be able to get up on some Rock Band in Washington. 7-8-9 anyone?

Dec2nd

For those who want to know

LowCommotion FTW! (Educational, WTF?!)
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This website provides a concise, reliable introduction to vital information of which few are aware. We specialize in providing fact-filled news articles and concise summaries of major cover-ups which impact our lives and world. All information is taken from the most reliable sources available and can be verified using the links provided. Sources are always noted, with links direct to the information source provided when possible.

Dec1st

2,700-year-old marijuana found in Chinese tomb

LowCommotion FTW! (Drugs)
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Researchers say they have located the world's oldest stash of marijuana, in a tomb in a remote part of China.

The cache of cannabis is about 2,700 years old and was clearly “cultivated for psychoactive purposes," rather than as fibre for clothing or as food, says a research paper in the Journal of Experimental Botany.

i remember this one time my friend’s mom gave us a bag she was stashing under her bathroom sink. god only knows how old that stuff was.

the first hit literally felt like we were smoking from a dirty vacuum cleaner, but the shit still worked!

Dec1st

dailyreview: Thrillville: OtR

TendrilsFor20 FTW! (Reviews, Video Games)
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Tycoon games are tough. Too complex and you drive off everyone who isn’t a CPA; too simple and you make it boring for anyone with half a brain. Thrillville errs on the “too simple” side, making you the teenage grandchild of a scatterbrained theme park owner, tasked with bringing the many parks back up to code, building and researching new rides, and helping other hormonal kids hook up while they’re at the park. The last part is just as creepy as it sounds.