Panic Attack 2009!

Panic Attack 2009! is a 5-minute short directed and animated by Uruguayan producer Fede Alvarez with a total budget of $300. And thanks to this video, Mr. Alvarez was apparently able to secure a $30 million deal with Hollywood. Hmmm, doesn’t that remind anyone of Neill Blomkamp‘s story? Anyways, here’s Panic Attack 2009!, for your viewing enjoyment.

Five Innovations that Will Change Cities in the Next Five Years

Today, IBM unveiled a list of innovations that have the potential to change how people live, work and play in cities around the globe over the next five to ten years: Cities will have healthier immune systems. City buildings will sense and respond like living organisms. Cars and city buses will run on empty. Smarter systems will quench cities’ thirst for water and save energy. Cities will respond to a crisis — even before receiving an emergency phone call. [Source: IBM]

[Via [H]]

Console modification not just for game piracy

wiimote

It appears as if the field of  science and technology is the next great battleground for the games console war. Following creative uses for the Xbox 360 and PS3, two scientists have developed new ways to use the Wii’s controller.

Hydrologist Willem Luxemburg and physicist Rolf Hut, both from the Dutch university Delft, showed off their work to the American Geophysical Union this week. Wired magazine reports that they both took advantage of the Wiimote sensor which can detect movement to closer than the nearest millimeter.

Hut created a relatively simple wind sensor: nothing more than a pole with the sensor from the Wiimote at its top. Luxemberg created a solution to a more complex problem: measuring evaporation, which normally requires equipment costing more than $500. To make things even more complex, he tried to find a method of doing so on a large body of water such as a lake.

His solution involves putting a LED on a floating device (a toy boat in the demo) and then pointing the Wiimote at it. The movement of the sensor tells you how high the water level is and thus indicates evaporation. The real beauty of the system is that the remote can take data from up to four LEDs, meaning much more accurate results without drastic increases in costs.

The pair believe that with a longer battery life and a way of storing data locally, the controller could be used for a much wider variety of purposes, particularly if you also make use of the in-built accelerometer.

Earlier this year, medical researchers revealed they are using the graphics chip from an Xbox 360 to investigate a heart condition. The parallel processing capability of the chip makes it ideal for simulating the way electrical signals move around damaged cells. Because the sheer number of cells means the number of possible routes is enormous, a standard computer chip which could only simulate and calculate one route at a time would take too long to make the work viable.

And in late 2008, security researchers used 200 PS3s to prove that the encryption system then used by Verizon, which had originally been thought to be so complex that it was unimaginable a machine could ever crack it, had now been made obsolete by increased computing power.

[Picture source: Make]

Clash of the Titans Trailer #2

The first trailer was ok, but the second one is totally epic. Check it out:

Clash of the Titans is an upcoming 2010 fantasy film which is a remake of the 1981 film of the same name, itself loosely based on the Greek myth of Perseus. The film is directed by Louis Leterrier and stars Sam Worthington. Filming began in April 2009 for release on March 26, 2010.[1] The music will be composed by Craig Armstrong.[2] Matthew Bellamy of Muse has also stated that he will be working on the music.

Don’t forget to hit the full screen button after pressing play!

Don’t Step in the Hot Mag.ma!

By Jimmy Rogers (@me)
Contributing Writer, [GAS]

When social media first emerged, it was more or less a chaotic system where the most popular content floated around through many, many blogs and websites.  Nowadays, though, a majority of that content is hosted on the “big names” of video storage: YouTube, Vimeo, and others.  This makes finding cool new videos more predictable, but you still have to jump from one site to another to get everything.

Magma is trying something new. Instead of trying to convince content producers to host everything on their site (a battle most everyone loses to YouTube), they simply use the pre-existing embeddable players from each big site and put everything together in one place.  This has been tried before, but what makes Magma special is ability for users to create their own accounts, share a feed of favorite videos, and follow what other users are watching.  If you’ve ever used YouTube’s profile and “friending” features you’ll understand why there’s some space for improvement.

Personally I’m interested in Magma, not only because of all the potentially great community tools available, but also because of who’s responsible for it: Rocketboom.  I’ve been watching Rocketboom’s video podcast for YEARS and, in my opinion, they really “get” the web as a social space.  Watching the following video, they really convinced me that there is a hole in the heart of the web into which Magma fits perfectly.

Already I’ve found myself using the easy bookmarklet almost daily.  I like how it can even recognize videos embedded in regular blogs! If you’d like to follow me on there, check out my page on Magma.

What do YOU think of this new social network?  Will it soar or flop?  Leave a comment!!!