Endhiran (The Robot) Theatrical Trailer

Co-written and directed by renowned Tamil film director Shankar, Enthiran (Translation: The Robot) is a forthcoming Tamil science fiction movie featuring Rajinikanth, the world’s highest paid Indian film actor. According to hindustantimes.com, Enthiran is the most expensive Indian film ever made.

A gifted scientist constructs an equally gifted robot, who sets out into the world for the first time with some unexpected and mind-blowing consequences. [Source]

[Via TDW]

The World’s Smallest Stop-Motion Animation

Professor Fletcher’s invention of the CellScope, which is a Nokia device with a microscope attachment, was the inspiration for a teeny-tiny film created by Sumo Science at Aardman. It stars a 9mm girl called Dot as she struggles through a microscopic world. All the minuscule detail was shot using CellScope technology and a Nokia N8, with its 12 megapixel camera and Carl Zeiss optics.

[Via Geekologie]


Moonshine Finds New Popularity Among Hobbyist Geeks

When you hear the word moonshine, it probably brings to mind a bygone era of Prohibition-thwarting, bathtub mixing, car chasing yokels, brewing up batches of questionable alcohol. Or Irish songs. But according to writer Michelle Locke, writing for AP and featured on the Mother Nature Network, moonshine is having something of a renaissance as of late. And it’s got quite a following among the maker geeks.

Max Watman, author of Chasing the White Dog—a book about the moonshine industry, had this to say about the hobbyist contingent:

The hobbyists are much more adventurous and a lot of fun. It’s very much a product of our time. We are obsessed with authenticity and we are obsessed with craft, or at least a certain segment of our population is. It’s part of the farmers market world. We all want to make our own cheese. We all want to cure our own bacon. It’s the same group that wants to make their own booze.

Sounds mighty geeky to me. The creation and distillation of alcohol is one of the oldest human hobbies, you might say, and it’s no surprise that there’s a movement to reclaim the process. I think that’s one of the hallmarks of geekery, really, that desire to get to the bottom of how things work. And with brewing alcohol, there’s certainly an alchemical component that is no doubt a big draw. Sure, there’s the whole problem of being illegal. But anything for the name of knowledge and science, right?

Of course, as the article goes on to point, while making alcoholic beverages may not be the most difficult thing in the world—at its most basic, anyway—doing it wrong can cause illness (like blindness) and even death. There’s a reason that alcohol is, by and large, a commercial business. However, there must be something rather satisfying about making your own spirits. I know, from my limited experience brewing beer, that working to craft a drink in your own home definitely gives you a sense of accomplishment. In this consumer-driven world, everything is available (provided you’re legal, and you have enough money) at a moment’s notice. But spending time creating something and waiting for the final product over the course of weeks or months, is an experience not to be missed.

Moonshine is made all over the world, with many different approaches and cultural significances. For a taste of some trivia, here’s a quick look at what the real people are drinking around the globe:

  • Bulgaria – Rakia, which is made from fruits, most commonly grapes. It is the national spirit, and as popular as wine. Rakia can be made both at home and in community stills.
  • Colombia – Illegal though it may be, “tapetusa” or “chirrinchi” remains quite popular. According to Wikipedia, “Chincha is usually made of corn, which is chewed and spat in an earthen container… then buried for some time.” Tapetusa is made from fermented apples.
  • Finland – Essentially home-made vodka, the Finns have a wide variety of names for their moonshine, including: kotipolttoinen, ponu, ponantsa, tuliliemi, korpiroju, korpikuusen kyyneleet, and moscha.
  • France – As you might expect, France has many different moonshine traditions. In Brittany and Normandy you can find lambic or calvados, made from distilled cider; mirabelle, prune, and kirsch is in the East (in places such as Alsace, Lorraine, Bourgogne, and Champagne).
  • Germany – The Germans call their moonshine Schwarzgebrannter, which means, roughly, “illegally distilled liquor”. But that doesn’t mean there’s an absence of home distillery, just that it’s limited. And there are some legal versions as well.
  • Guatemala – Cusha is the moonshine of this area. Shamans also drink it during ceremonies, where it is spit upon their patients.
  • Nigeria – A host of colorful names characterize Nigerian moonshine: ogogoro, kainkain, abua first eleven, agabagba, akpeteshi, aka mere, “push me, I push you”, and crazy man in the bottle. I am particularly fond of that last one.
  • New Zealand – Legal home distillation makes New Zealand unusual. There’s no worries making your own here. Their most famous is Hokonui Moonshine, which is now produced commercially by the Southern Distilling Company.
  • Switzerland – When absinthe was banned at the turn of the 20th century, moonshiners continued to make the famed drink, which originally hails from Switzerland. Now that it is no longer illegal, however, that market has changed somewhat. Still, I imagine absinthe home-brew style could have some rather mind-boggling side-effects.
  • United States – A multitude of names characterize this drink depending on the origin, including white lightning. Often seen in Mason jars. Also, due to moonshine, stock car racing was born.

(via Wikipedia, Fark; image in the public domain, a seized distillery unit ca. 1921-1932)

Portable DIY Coilgun Looks Totally Badass

Wow, not only is the technical design on this portable coilgun impressive, but the whole thing looks completely badass. Check it out:

After 2 long years of on-and-off work my coilgun project is finally completed. For anyone who doesn’t know what a coilgun is, it’s a gun that fires a projectile with magnetic force instead of gunpowder. The projectile from this gun won’t kill a person, but the electrical energy stored in the capacitors is 78 times the lethal amount for human beings so this is no toy.

[Via Crunchgear]

Don’t IT make you feel good?

Information technology makes you happy — and it’s not just because of earning more money. At least that’s the claim of a new report by the former British Computer Society.

The group, now known as “BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT” says its analysis shows the biggest beneficial effects are for women and new users.

The report (PDF), “Information Dividend: Why IT makes you ‘happier’?” looks at multiple studies around the world. It looks at the increased levels of life satisfaction reported by people using IT, discounting the effects of income and other well-being related factors.

While it might be assumed that tech is the realm of the well-off and well-educated, the report found that in most cases the most striking effects were among the lower paid. This pattern continued all the way down the income brackets, with the exception of the lowest (household income under £14,000/approx US$20,000). That may be because this category covers retired people that find computers less engaging.

There was also a clear gender divide, with women’s satisfaction increasing much more through IT use than men. The biggest distinction came in developing nations, which may be because women in local cultures are more likely to be in “socially controlled roles”, a restriction that doesn’t apply as much when they are online.

However, there was still a difference in developed nations. Some studies covered by the report suggest this is because women gain more from the social element of technology. Another difference was that with men, the more use of IT they had, the bigger effect it had on their satisfaction levels, whereas frequency of use wasn’t a significant factor with women.

The report also puts together a league table of “Information Well-being” that measures the life satisfaction benefits in 38 countries, adjusting the results for gross domestic product. Unsurprisingly that meant developing nations came off best, with Zambia listed as the place where IT has the biggest benefits for uses. China came at the bottom, which is almost certainly because of the tight restrictions on internet use.

What is the iPad, really?

Jeff at the Aplepi blog recently wrote an article flatly dismissing the lineup of peripherals designed to bring a keyboard interface to the iPad, in an article entitled: “Please, for the sake of advancing technology, just let the keyboard die already.”

Not because any specific peripheral was poorly made, but that “there are still plenty of folks out there who just don’t get Steve Jobs’ vision” [sic] of a peripheral-free computing device that operates solely out of the touchscreen.

At first I thought that it was borderline idiotic, especially coming from my background as a writer. The reason one might want a keyboard for the iPad is that touch typists work much more quickly entering in information by qwerty (or in rare cases, dvorak) keyboard. When I’m using an iPad, iPhone, or other similar touchscreen device, it takes me forever to write anything longer than a Google search term.

But then I thought – Jeff has a point. The iPad is not designed to be used with external input devices like keyboards and mice – because it is not, strictly speaking, designed to be a creative device. It is, in effect, an output-driven device, designed solely for consuming, rather than creating.

Indeed, it was Apple who once led the charge of creating computers designed to cater to creative people. Lately it seems that that the market is being abandoned for creating devices to cater towards passive people. There are plenty of musicians who own iPods, but they do not create music on an iPod; there are plenty of writers who own iPads, but they do not, as a general rule, write on the iPad.

A future defined by the iPad is in many ways, a huge step backwards. I don’t know what version number of the Web we’re on now, but wasn’t Web 2.0 – YouTube, Facebook, Blogging – defined by becoming a Web of creation and collaboration rather than of passive consumption?

So, what is the iPad really? In short, it’s a passive entertainment device. If you want to read something someone else has written, listen to music someone else composed, or watch a video someone else shot, the iPad is a portable, fun device.

This is not a criticism of the device; but to suggest that the iPad represents the future of computing as a whole (as Jeff at Aplepi’s provocatively worded title implies) sends chills up my spine as a content creator.

Thoughts?