Tag Archive for movies

Holding Out For A Hero: New Films In Canada

From Netflix Blog:

When Bonnie Tyler sang about holding out for a hero, she could have been referring to any one of the stars featured in our upcoming movies in April and May.  Over the coming weeks, the mutants of “X-Men: First Class,” the robots of “Transformers: Dark Side of the Moon,” the Norse-folk of “Thor,” and the shield-holder of “Captain America” will all be making their Netflix debuts in Canada.  The fighting bear of “Kung Fu Panda II”, the jouster of “A Knight’s Tale”,  the pilot of “Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow” and the spies of “Charlie’s Angels” will also be joining us this Spring.  So enjoy the kicks, explosions, and broken lances … and know that you won’t have to hold out for a hero for much longer. 

Trove of free, public domain HD video – Boing Boing

From BoingBoing:

Rick Prelinger sez,

I’m delighted to let everyone know about our newest Internet Archive collection which, for want of a cooler title, we’re calling 35mm Stock Footage. Digitized from 35mm original negatives and release prints dating back to the first decade of the 20th century, these unedited sequences were shot for feature films but never used. Studio librarians saved them for use in future productions, and now you can download and use them yourself in a variety of formats, including 720p HD, absolutely free. As far as I know, this is Internet Archive’s first all-HD collection.

In the first wave of materials: a trip across the George Washington Bridge in the late 1940s, a snake slithering on rainy ground, aerials of Hollywood studios, 1940s Southern California hotrodders, stunt flying, miniature airplanes crashing, the Staten Island Ferry in the 1930s, and much more. Much of the footage is “process plates” — film shot for the rear-projection screens you see out of car, taxi and train windows in old movies.

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Apple Releases iOS 5.1, Possibly Fixing Long-Standing Reception and Battery Issues with the iPhone 4S

From Lifehacker:

Today Apple announced the availability of iOS 5.1 for most of the world and, in a couple of weeks, Japan (who will finally get Siri). While there are few significant changes, there are minor but notable updates. Here are what we think is most relevant:

  • iPhone 4S battery and reception issues should improve, thanks to various bug fixes, optimizations, and new baseband firmware.
  • You can now delete photos from your photo stream.
  • The camera shortcut is now always visible on the home screen.
  • Any audio dropouts during calls should now be a thing of the past.
  • iPads get a redesigned camera app, a 30 second rewind button on podcasts, and audio optimizations for movies and TV shows to make them louder and clearer.

You can update now via Software Update on your iDevice or you can manually install through iTunes. Jailbreakers should hold off for now as there’s no word of when an iOS 5.1 jailbreak will be available.

iOS 5.1 Software Update | Apple Knowledge Base via The Verge

Uncle Sam: If It Ends in .Com, It’s .Seizable

From Wired:

When U.S. authorities shuttered sports-wagering site Bodog.com last week, it raised eyebrows across the net because the domain name was registered with a Canadian company, ostensibly putting it beyond the reach of the U.S. government. Working around that, the feds went directly to VeriSign, a U.S.-based internet backbone company that has the contract to manage the coveted .com and other “generic” top-level domains.

EasyDNS, an internet infrastructure company, protested that the “ramifications of this are no less than chilling and every single organization branded or operating under .com, .net, .org, .biz etc. needs to ask themselves about their vulnerability to the whims of U.S. federal and state lawmakers.”

But despite EasyDNS and others’ outrage, the U.S. government says it’s gone that route hundreds of times. Furthermore, it says it has the right to seize any .com, .net and .org domain name because the companies that have the contracts to administer them are based on United States soil, according to Nicole Navas, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman.

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Introducing Google Play: All your entertainment, anywhere you go – Official Google Mobile Blog

From Google Mobile Blog:

Entertainment is supposed to be fun. But in reality, getting everything to work can be the exact opposite—moving files between your computers, endless syncing across your devices, and wires…lots of wires. Today we’re eliminating all that hassle with Google Play, a digital entertainment destination where you can find, enjoy and share your favorite music, movies, books and apps on the web and on your Android phone or tablet. Google Play is entirely cloud-based so all your music, movies, books and apps are stored online, always available to you, and you never have to worry about losing them or moving them again.

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