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1968 ASCII Animation from Russia

There’s Up, there’s Shrek, and then there’s…this. It’s a bit of experimental computer animation of a cat done in Russia in 1968. The scientists who made it created hundreds of ASCII art images of the kitty, then printed them out and filmed them pose by pose.
Vi feirer den nye uka med en femti år gammel russisk ascii-art-animasjon: - God mandag!

Algebra in Wonderland

SINCE “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” was published, in 1865, scholars have noted how its characters are based on real people in the life of its author, Charles Dodgson, who wrote under the name Lewis Carroll. Alice is Alice Pleasance Liddell, the daughter of an Oxford dean; the Lory and Eaglet are Alice’s sisters Lorina and Edith; Dodgson himself, a stutterer, is the Dodo (“Do-Do-Dodgson”). But Alice’s adventures with the Caterpillar, the Mad Hatter, the Cheshire Cat and so on have often been assumed to be based purely on wild imagination. Just fantastical tales for children — and, as such, ideal material for the fanciful movie director Tim Burton, whose “Alice in Wonderland” opened on Friday. Yet Dodgson most likely had real models for the strange happenings in Wonderland, too. He was a tutor in mathematics at Christ Church, Oxford, and Alice’s search for a beautiful garden can be neatly interpreted as a mishmash of satire directed at the advances taking place in Dodgson’s field.
Algebra in Wonderland - - DETTE var dere ikke klar over

Buying DVDs vs pirating them

This pithy and funny chart does a superb job of explaining how the insertion of a lot of "business model" (FBI warnings, unskippable trailers, THX vanity sequences) makes buying a DVD a lot worse than pirating the same disc online. I rip all my kid's DVDs (not least because she has a tendency to scratch them to hell), and the difference between firing up a movie on a laptop and it just starting versus trying to explain to a toddler why Daddy has to spend five minutes pressing next-next-next menu-menu-menu is enormous. I think it all comes down to the stuff in the DVD-CCA spec that allows DVD creators to flag sequences as unskippable: that's such an attractive nuisance, it's bound to attract every hard-sell marketer and power-tripping fool in any media company, who will eventually colonize it with so much crapola that it comes just short of destroying the possibility that anyone will voluntarily pay for the product. (Be sure to click below for the whole thing)
Filmindustrien i et nøtteskall. Håper bokbransjen ikke går i samme hengemyra i alle fall: (via @osol)

Koran-dorull og sataniske vers

Avisen The Times har kåret de 20 hendelsene som har vekket mest rop om
blasfemi de siste 100 årene. Hendelsene er rangert ut fra fem kriterier –
hvor vulgært og kriminelt det er, hvilke religiøse og politiske følger det
får, samt hvor mange dødsfall som kan knyttes til det.

Fantastic Sci-Fi and Fantasy Movie Poster Inspiration, 1925 to 2010

Science Fiction posters are quite often the most interesting - it gives designers great opportunities to experiment with things they don't usually experiment with on a day-to-day basis, such as futuristic lighting and unusual compositions. This post showcases ninety-nine sci-fi movie posters in total, starting with The Lost World from 1925, right the way through to Disney's Tron Legacy which is due for release mid-December at the end of this year.
Utrolig mye flotte plakater