Archive for August, 2010
BeamAtic Premium headlights let you keep your high beams on all night long
It looks like the highways of Japan could soon get a bit brighter — at least if these new BeamAtic Premium head lights from Ichikoh Industries ever catch on. Developed by France’s Valeo SA, the headlights make use of an on-board camera and some image processing software that tracks oncoming vehicles, and some movable dousers [...]
HP Holds Navy Network ‘Hostage’ for $3.3 Billion
The Navy has to pay HP billions to buy the out-of-date equipment and examine blueprints for the network. It’s another example of the military’s utter reliance on outside contractors.
What If UberCab Pulls An Airbnb? Taxi Business Could (Finally) Get Some Disruption
If you live in San Francisco and you haven’t tried UberCab yet, do it. The service, which we first covered in July, eliminates everything bad about a taxi experience. In my order, that’s flagging one down, finding the cash to pay, and being in a sometimes disgusting car. For bonus points, I always enjoy negotiating [...]
Canon develops world’s largest CMOS sensor, shoots 60fps video in moonlight
Did you ever think that you’d see a CMOS sensor measuring 202 x 205 mm? That’s 7.95 x 8.07 inches to our fine imperial friends. Its impressive size — about 40 times larger than Canon’s largest commercial CMOS sensor — translates to staggering light-gathering capabilities, capturing images in one one-hundredth the amount of light required [...]
It’s Another Ride for Ben Affleck, Filmmaker-Star
“The Town” gives Ben Affleck another chance to shine as writer, director and star.
Movie Review | ‘My Dog Tulip’: A Tender Love Story Between Man and Dog
“My Dog Tulip,” an animated film based on the 1956 memoir by J. R. Ackerley, explores a lonely man’s devotion toward his pet.
Music Review: Satchmo’s Story, Music Substituting for Words
Wynton Marsalis and friends provided the live accompaniment for a silent film about Louis Armstrong’s childhood.
Alain Corneau, César-Winning Film Director, Dies at 67
The director was best known for his 1991 award-winning film “Tous les Matins du Monde.”
Movie Review | ‘The American’: Traveling Man With Few Words And a Big Gun
This suspense thriller, directed by Anton Corbijn, is often more evocative of the art house than of the multiplex.
Movie Review | ‘The American’: A Man of Few Words and an Artisanal Weapon
This suspense thriller, directed by Anton Corbijn, is often more evocative of the art house than of the multiplex.