‘Black Angel,’ the Lost Short Film Meant to Play in Front of ‘Empire Strikes Back’ Has Been Found, Restored…& Released! [VIDEO]

Last year, we brought you the story about Black Angel, the 25-minute short film commissioned by George Lucas that was to play in front of The Empire Strikes Back across Europe and Australia. The print was lost for over three decades, until it resurfaced about three years ago.

After undergoing some restoration and few premieres at film festivals, Black Angel has finally made its way on to the web, along with an introduction by director Roger Christian.

You can watch it IN FULL right now!

And Christian says to watch social media for a special announcement on June 2!

[via AV Club]

This RC Millennium Falcon mk.II Quadcopter is Beyond Amazing [Video]

We’ve featured a previous version of Olivier C’s Millennium Falcon quadcopter in the past, but this new and improved edition looks way better.

GEAR :
A quadcopter : Omen 410 (custom frame, carbon and aluminium)
Motors : Quanum 2217 800kV
Speed controllers : Afro ESC 30A
Propellers : HQprop 9×4.5MR
Battery: LiPo 4S-3300mAh 35C
Flight controller : Naza + GPS
Radio system : Futaba 14SG, receiver FrSky TFR8SB
Camera : Gopro 4 Silver 1080p-50
Weight of the carrier : 1180gr
Weight of the model : 505gr

For those interested, all part are available through hobbyking.com.

[Olivier C]

L’Oreal Wants To 3D-Print Human Skin

organovo

L’Oreal is to 3D-print human skin for use in cosmetics testing. It’s a development of an existing program of producing the skin in a lab.

According to the BBC, L’Oreal already uses donated tissue to grow more than 100,000 skin samples a year for testing purposes, avoiding the need for testing on animals or live humans. Each sample is 0.5 square centimetres and covers nine different age and ethnicity groups. Around 60 staff work on the project, which has been running since the 1980s.

It now says it is in an early stage of a partnership with Organovo, a company that says it can 3D-print human organs. L’Oreal says:

Our partnership will not only bring about new advanced in vitro methods for evaluating product safety and performance, but the potential for where this new field of technology and research can take us is boundless.

The partnership will involve L’Oreal providing the funding and the “skin expertise” while Organovo takes care of the tech. They’ve divided up the usage rights to the 3D-printed skin, with Organovo getting the exclusivity on using it for drug testing and other medical uses, while L’Oreal gets the exclusive on cosmetic skin care testing.

Scientists quoted in the media are, to say the least, skeptical about some of Organovo’s previous claims to be able to print a human liver. Alan Faulkner-Jones said that although the material used was technically liver tissue, the resulting object might not have the same structure as the real thing.

He said that 3D-printing skin was more plausible because it’s made up of layers, which is the basis of how such printers work.

If things work as planned, the output shouldn’t be any different to L’Oreal’s current skin sample production; all that would change would be the speed of production and thus the total amount of sample available. According to Bloomberg L’Oreal already sells around half the sample it makes, to both pharmaceutical firms and other cosmetic manufacturers.