Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Movies on Demand, on Your Phone


From Urban Daddy's newsletter.
Website: Mobile Movies
"Your phone does a lot.

It rates beauty, dodges traffic and makes the occasional phone call.

And while all that's well and good, you get the feeling it could do just a bit more. We're thinking a screening of The Godfather is a good start.

Introducing Mobile Movies—the first mobile site around that enables you to stream the latest popcorn flicks and indie dramas on your phone—available today.

The site works on more than 30 different smart phones (your brick phone, somehow, is not on the list) and goes where neither Netflix nor Blockbuster has gone before (i.e. your phone). Starting now, you'll have full, anytime access to 350 movies and growing—with Inglourious Basterds already in the pipeline—thanks to partnerships with studios like Paramount Pictures and Universal.

Imagine the possibilities: catch Ferris Bueller's Day Off while ditching work at the de Young, stream Crossing Over in the airport en route to Sayulita or take in Zack and Miri Make a Porno on that conference call with marketing.

To get started, just browse the listings or preview the free trailers to find a title you want to watch, order it à la carte or join the monthly membership, then stream it instantly. Like a video store, you'll have access to movies for a day or up to five.

Just without any annoying clerks."

Monday, September 28, 2009

Times.com Pictures of the Week: Tuesday, Sep 22, 2009
















Electric
A lightning storm flashes over the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco Bay.
BY Frank Fennema / Caters News / ZUMA
Taken from this site.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Pencil Test Depot.com

"Animation Pencil Tests from Various Films and Shows. This blog was created for people who love to see the pencil test form of animation. Instead of going to various places to find them, I hope to add many tests here from some great animators..."

Click this link to see the site:

Pencil Test Depot.com

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Episodes of HOW IT'S MADE

Interesting educational documentaries on how everyday things are made. click here:
Episode Guide of How It's Made on Science Channel.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Eight Adult Only Animations

"Too much animation on the internet aimed just at kids? Try these online animations – not ones that you would want to share with the little ones, perhaps."
Go to Eight Adult Only Online Animations | Webupon to watch them.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Japan Gets Its First Chance to See The Cove


a Time.com article.

September heralds the six-month dolphin-hunting season in Taiji, a small seaside town in Japan's southwestern Wakayama prefecture. And residents are sensing the attack on them has also begun. The Cove — a U.S. documentary with the air of a spy thriller that has been called "advocacy filmmaking at its best" since its release on July 31 — depicts Taiji's centuries-old tradition of killing dolphins with an unflinching eye on the sometimes gruesome process. The documentarians, led by photographer turned director Louie Psihoyos and dolphin trainer turned activist Richard O'Barry, have stirred both international outcry and acclaim at film festivals from Sundance to Seattle with their footage of the slaughter that takes place every year in a remote cove in Taiji.

Earlier this week, the town decided to release 70 of the roughly 100 dolphins from the previous week's catch. But Taiji fishermen aren't the only ones bowing to international pressure. Tokyo International Film Festival (TIFF) chairman Tom Yoda announced on Sept. 16 that the festival will screen the film, after previously rejecting it for TIFF's official selection (the festival starts next month). Having come under fire for initially rejecting the documentary, Yoda said the reasons for rejecting or accepting films aren't generally discussed, as the festival receives more than 700 entries each year. No film festival has a moral obligation to accept a film, but TIFF's slogan of "Action! For Earth" raised more than a few eyebrows when the widely lauded eco-documentary didn't make the cut. In the end, Yoda said, the festival "decided to take The Cove due to international attention worldwide."

For dramatic effect, The Cove casts Taiji's dolphin hunt as one town's dirty secret. The reality, however, is that Japan culls about 20,000 dolphins across the nation every year. To those in Taiji and other areas where dolphin hunting is permitted, the global reaction to The Cove has a whiff of the enduringly contentious whaling debate (Japan has hunted whales in the name of science for decades despite environmentalists' ire). The new wave of criticism of dolphin hunting that has been spurred by the film has many fishermen and local bureaucrats rolling their eyes over what they interpret as a another bout of foreign outrage at a practice that is legal, regulated and culturally acceptable in Japan, where dolphin meat — like whale — is eaten in the regions where it's hunted.

Meanwhile, the people of Taiji, pop. circa 3,400, believe they have been unfairly singled out. While Taiji has a 400-year history of whale and dolphin hunting, its fishermen catch less than 20% of Japan's yearly dolphin quota. Iwate prefecture catches the most of any area, bringing in a total of 11,070 dolphins in 2006 and 10,218 in 2007. But even those figures are well below the prefecture's legal limits, and Taiji fishermen also hunted about half their limit in 2006 and 2007, averaging about 1,430 dolphins a year. In response to The Cove, town-council chief Katsutoshi Mihara told the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper, "I don't understand their way of pushing their own values."

Almost all the dolphins caught in Japan are sold for meat near the towns where they're caught, and only 1% — a few dozen — are sold live to aquariums. Masashi Nishimura, manager of the Japan Fisheries Association's international section, who also works with environmental issues, says most Japanese people don't know much about the dolphin hunts. "I don't think it's a big topic here," he says. "As long as [their killing] is humane, dolphins are like other animals to us." The most humane technique, according to Nishimura, would be to use high-tech machines to minimize the animals' suffering. The most common hunting methods, however, are oikomi, a process illustrated in the film in which fishermen chase dolphins into shallow water and surround them with a net, and tsukimbo, in which dolphins are killed individually by harpoon. Taiji is the only place in Japan to recently practice oikomi.

Killing dolphins for meat is a cultural issue on both sides of the debate. While cute and often anthropomorphized, dolphins, unlike some whale populations hunted by Japanese fishermen, are not endangered. The film editorializes that the statues and images of whales and dolphins in Taiji purposefully hide the town's dark secret of killing the animals. But the Japanese have a history of venerating and praying for animals that die for the well-being of humans and sometimes erect statues and hold festivals to comfort the animals' souls. What might be considered macabre or inappropriate by Western standards is a way of life — and a perspective on nature — for the Japanese people. Shigeki Takaya, who is in charge of the whaling section of the Far Seas Fisheries division at the Fisheries Agency, says dolphins are a "resource, just like fish. Killing animals in any way is bloody, unfortunately, just like slaughtering cows and pigs."

One of The Cove's central points, however, is not as open for cultural interpretation. Dolphin meat — like whale — contains high levels of mercury, and at its highest instances, the concentration of methyl mercury in bottlenose dolphin meat is 32 times the limit set by Japan's Health Ministry. School children in Taiji eat dolphin, like the rest of the town's population. Junichiro Yamashita, who years ago raised national awareness of dolphin meat's health risks as Taiji's local assemblyman, was interviewed for the film along with current assemblyman Hisato Ryono. But Ryono, who was touted as a hero on the mercury issue in the documentary, told a local television station that he was informed his interview would be used in a film on "international contamination of the oceans," not for the Cove project. He has requested that the filmmakers edit out the parts in which he appears.

As for the Japanese public, they will have the chance to make up their own minds about the film — if The Cove is released in theaters after the festival. Whether the acclaim will be as great as it has been at other festivals remains to be seen. But for the filmmakers, a few dolphins freed and a screening at TIFF might just be reward enough.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Canon Digital Rebel T1i vs. Nikon D5000 review.

A maclife article.

It's the DSLR version of Mac vs. PC--except without as obvious a winner.

Coke versus Pepsi. Mac versus PC. Canon versus Nikon. Among these great rivalries, we can only pick out one clear winner. (Here’s a hint: It’s not the colored sugar water.) In the latest Canon-versus-Nikon entry-level digital SLR (single-lens reflex) battle, both cameras score hits against the other.

But in the end, they’re much more similar than different. If you already use a film camera from either camera maker--and own a few lenses--don’t bother switching sides. If you’re not already invested in hardware that only works with one of them, your decision is much more nuanced. After much debate, we give a tiny edge to the Nikon D5000 for its impressive high-ISO performance. But you could just as easily fall in love with the Canon Rebel T1i for its slightly brighter, clearer LCD.

Canon Digital Rebel T1i

The T1i is light in your palm, weighing about 1.5 pounds with the bundled lens. We felt comfortable slinging it around and shooting with just one hand in one of the auto modes. Like the D5000, the T1i uses a single LCD screen to show your exposure data. (Most midrange and high-end DSLRs include a top-mounted screen too.) But the clear markings give enough details for manual photos, and you can also see the most important information inside the viewfinder.

The T1i LCD edges out the D5000 in a direct comparison. Canon’s slightly larger screen sports a higher resolution and looks great when reviewing recent images. It also looks a little better outdoors, but just as the D5000’s, this screen washes out in bright sun. When you sight through the eyepiece, the screen automatically turns off, which is a major benefit at night.

Images look good overall, although the T1i has a few weaknesses. We shot clean colors in many different lighting conditions, but the auto settings look more muted than higher-priced cameras. While bright daylight can wash out the hues, and night images without a flash run too warm, they are common problems that can be combated with manual controls. Earmark a lot of storage space for best results: The T1i’s 15.1-megapixel RAW photos can run 20MB each.

Mid- and high-ISO night photos mark the T1i’s biggest weakness. Images show moderate noise--random, colored pixels in dark areas—at about 400 ISO. Significant noise enters past 800 ISO, a setting you’d try to use to compensate for minimal lighting.


Nikon D5000


The D5000 is roughly the same shape and weight as the T1i. Nikon’s camera felt just as comfortable to shoot with, and its versatile LCD helps you shoot in awkward positions.

Like the T1i, the D5000 includes a live-view shooting mode, so instead of looking through the eyepiece, the preview image gets diverted to the LCD just like a point-and-shoot camera. But since the D5000 LCD swivels and turns, you can hold the camera high above your head, around a corner, or at ground level and still get a clear view of the screen. The 2.7-inch screen unfortunately stays lit when you compose shots through the eyepiece. But you can rotate it against the body, giving up exposure details for just the viewfinder information.

We thought that colors in photos shot with the D5000 popped a little more than those shot with the T1i, although the 12.3-megapixel D5000 scored only a subtle edge. And like the T1i, fine details looked excellent, such as the furry texture on a flower’s leaf.

In low light, the D5000’s clearer high-ISO modes perform better. We cranked the setting up to 2500 ISO before the noise seemed too distracting, but you could go even higher in a pinch. Images brightened up in this mode, helping us shoot in certain night conditions--indoors or with a streetlight--with no flash.

Tough Call

The similarities between these SD-card DSLRs outnumber most of the differences. Both shutter speeds range from 1/4,000th second to bulb mode (where you hold the shutter open as long as you choose). Both start up and continuously shoot images with almost no delay. Both have competent stabilizers built in to the bundled 18-55mm lenses, netting shake-free photos as slow as about 0.4 second. And both shoot weak high-definition video, blurring moving subjects or camera pans into useless footage. (If your subjects and framing stay mostly static, video can look great, however.) Other than that video complaint, they’re both winning cameras.