Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Cult Movies Podcast #43

Just a quick podcast to get us through the holiday weekend and into next week. You've got some extra time to watch The Blob before we cover it in the next episode.

In this episode:

Listener mail.

New York Ripper - a giallo film that isn't boring.

Dragon*Con is coming up this weekend, Scott will be there.

Listen now.

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Wired's Chris Kohler chats with Uwe Boll

This is just precious.

I met Uwe Boll about two years ago (for the premiere of Bloodrayne at the Austin Film Festival) and he hasn't done a lot since then to convince the world of his prowess as a movie director. There's always the chance that he's playing up these conflicts with the press for the sake of publicity, but that would require an insight about his own work that I don't think he has. At least, not from the content of these interviews.

There's not much content here, other than Uwe Boll flicks continue to stink. Also, against incomprehensible odds, Uwe Boll continues to make movies.

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Sunday, August 26, 2007

Stomp Tokyo Cult Movies Podcast #42

Here's what's new:

HD-DVD vs Blu-Ray - things heat up without really going anywhere.

Burn Notice: new TV series from USA about a rogue spy. Featuring Bruce Campbell in the alcoholic buddy role.

Yet another version of "Color out of Space."

Grindhouse: What happened?

This weeks' movie: Naked You Die.

Next week's homework: The Blob (Criterion edition or cheapo version).

Listen to the Cult Movies Podcast #42 now (no iPod required, of course).

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

MC Outdoorz - Episode 2



The great thing is that someone actually paid Scott to make these.

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Friday, August 17, 2007

Respec' yo mama - Mama Nature


Directed by Scott Allen Perry.

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Stomp Tokyo Cult Movies Podcast #41

Cult Movies PodcastThings we talk about this week:

News updates from last week's news, upcoming genre TV, and our first homework assignment: The Devil's Backbone.

Listen to episode 41 now (no iPod required).

Links to things we talk about in this week's show:

Beowulf gets simultaneous release as IMAX 3-D film

Donnie Yen - the next Jackie Chan?

Jekyll at BBC

Bionic Woman page at NBC

Guillermo del Toro interview on NPR's Fresh Air

Next weeks' homework: Naked, You Die

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Saturday, August 11, 2007

Arms sore from Wii. Can only blog this lame YouTube video.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Stomp Tokyo Podcast Episode #40

PodcastScott has a brand new Apple TV so we review the differences between that and Tivo and a few other digital movie watching options as well.

Then we get down to the nitty gritty and look at some upcoming movies including Beowulf, The Seeker, Rush Hour 3, and 10,000 BC (or as we like to call it, Apocalypto Lite).

Listen now, no iPod required.

Bonus: At the end of the episode, we assign homework!

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new iLife, iWork updates from Apple - so why does .Mac suck?

It is no secret that I'm a big Apple fan, so naturally when they release products my ears perk up. Yesterday brought a new line of iMacs, newly redesigned to be more eco-friendly in material construction and more like the new iPhone visually. This was no surprise as they essentially did the same thing a few years back for the iMac -- designed it to look like a big version of the white iPod. They look like great machines and if I ever have need for a desktop machine instead of a laptop I'm sure an iMac is what I'll end up with.

More interesting to me, however, was the release of new versions of iWork and iLife, the office and creative tools designed by Apple to be used by people who appreciate elegant, easy-to-use software tools. Do I sound like a shill? Well, at least I'm a sincere shill.

iworkiWork got a new application called Numbers which sounds like a kinda-sorta spreadsheet application but with better tools for those of us who use spreadsheets like normal people, not like accountants. No offense to accountants, but I only ever used a tiny fraction of the functions of which Excel was capable, and some of those functions were too difficult to figure out so I didn't use them even if I wanted to. I suspect Numbers does a better job of making the most commonly used functions accessible and easy to use for those of us who aren't Excel wizards. I've heard similarly great things about Pages (the word processor/page layout program in iWork) and Keynote, the PowerPoint presentation package. I haven't bought previous versions of iWork and it's doubtful I'll buy this version, at least for a while -- because someone else got there first.

That someone else is Google. These days I use Google Docs and Spreadsheets for almost all of my office tasks, especially if I need to share those documents. Both Google Docs and Google Spreadsheets are easy to use, readily accessible to anyone with a web browser, and free. There is still the occasional need to open an Excel file or Word document and for those I use Microsoft Office, but only because that is what opens automatically when I double click those documents. If I uninstalled Office and forced myself to use Google's tools for those things I could probably do without an office application entirely. Sure, Google has no Powerpoint/Keynote presentation app, but by the time I need one they probably will. The killer feature is being able to share the document for reading and/or collaboration with others -- I never have to worry about which version of the document I'm working on, and I can see in real time whether one of my collaborators is working on the document at the same moment.

Sure, Google's apps require that I have a web connection to use them, but in Austin I am rarely without service. Anywhere. I was in a coffee shop recently where they have free wireless but I wasn't able to connect, so I just hopped on one of the other three open networks nearby. The time is coming when every area of moderately dense population will have wireless connections everywhere, so the need for Internet connectivity isn't much of a stumbling block.

But I was talking about Apple, wasn't I?

ilife08The new iLife '08 is something I'll be picking up immediately -- or at least, as immediately as I can with my wife's educator discount. I use iPhoto almost daily for digital photographs, and Garageband and iMovie have their uses in both work, personal, and hobby life. I prefer other web tools to iWeb, but if iWeb improves past say, Rapidweaver I'll probably look at it more seriously.

iPhoto's new capabilities look great -- Apple understands that a great software tool isn't just about manipulating the files you're working with, but also about organizing them. Enter the concept of "events," which lets you browse your photos by event times that you define (all digital photos are tagged with the date they were taken in-camera). Their "Web Gallery" sharing feature is a welcome addition for lots of folks, I'm sure, but again another web service has stepped in to make it less desirable for me.

For photo sharing, I use Flickr. Flickr not only archives and shares my photos, but also lets me present them in a slideshow and all that great stuff. It brings a lot of social elements like comments into the mix. If I have a bunch of photos of an event, it can group them into an event-related set, or I can even upload them to a public group with other Flickr members' photos from the same event. Apple doesn't offer anything even remotely like that, so it's doubtful that I'll share my photos anywhere other than Flickr for a good long while.

dotmacApple did have the foresight to expand the storage capacity on .Mac (their online mail and web tools service) to ten gigabytes, though this pales in comparison to Flickr's unlimited storage capacity -- at a quarter of Apple's asking price, I might mention. Apple does offer more features in the non-photo sharing realm than Flickr, including an e-mail address, but most of those features are so lame in comparison to other comparable web services (most of which are cheap or free) that Apple's $100 annual fee is laughably overpriced. If .Mac didn't have hooks into the OS X operating system -- so that I can sync my bookmarks and address book between multiple computers, for example -- I wouldn't use .Mac at all.

A quick sampling of .Mac's services and the competitor that trounces them:


  • Web hosting - practically anyone does web hosting cheaper, though few do it easier. This might be worth it for home users who don't want to learn about nasty acronyms like FTP, CSS, and HTML
  • IMAP mail & web mail - GMail is by far the best webmail client out there, though I do wish it supported IMAP.
  • Groups - like YahooGroups or Google Groups. Haven't tried Apple's service though I'm sure the free services compare favorably.
  • iDisk (online storage) - see web hosting.
  • Backup - Apple's backup tool is a joke. I've been trying to use Mozy for a while now with little success but will fall back on SuperDuper to back up my laptop since I haven't done a full backup in a while. Mozy seems like a great idea (backing up to an online service while your Mac is idle) but it's so slow to upload that it seems practically useless. Another problem is that I tend to close my laptop when I'm not using it, so idle time isn't exactly abundant.


Wow - I had a lot of pent-up aggression towards .Mac (pronounce it "dot Mac"), but is it surprising? Apple does so many things so very well that when they drop the ball it really stands out. Why hasn't Apple built the killer online service, something worth a hundred bucks a year? Why are they content to lag so far behind in this area, when they lead in so many others?

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Sunday, August 05, 2007

End Times Arrive: Fake Steve Jobs Outed by NY Times Reporter

You know that guy at work who always has to draw attention to himself by spoiling everyone else's fun, usually while proving that he's smarter than the other people in the room?

Next time he comes around, call him Brad.

Brad Stone at the New York Times revealed the true identity of Fake Steve Jobs, who entertained us for a long while (months?), posing as the real Steve Jobs and writing the wacky things the real SJ probably thinks but can't say. I won't link to the article here, but I'm sure you can find it.

Here is FSJ's awesome reply.

Long Live FSJ -- I'll keep reading even if I do know who you are.

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Friday, August 03, 2007

Cloverfield poster released

Cloverfield


If this poster doesn't give you a minor case of the chills, you're either:

a) not a giant monster fan

b) dead.

[Via Giant Monsters Attack.]

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Thursday, August 02, 2007

MGM Midnite Movie madness continues

Yongary & KongaFor a while there it looked like MGM might not put out any more of these terrific Midnight Movies double-feature discs, but we can all breathe easy -- a new batch of discs is apparently on the way for Halloween along with some other goodies from Fox, as highlighted by the ever-vigilant DVD Drive-In.

Among the discs coming out: a Yongary/Konga double-feature -- finally, a version of Yongary that (probably) won't look like crap. The "public domain" version released by Alpha is pretty washed-out so I'm hopeful that the print used for this disc is clean and bright. See some of those washed-out screen caps on the Stomp Tokyo review of Yongary.

Also on tap: The Phantom from 10,000 Leagues with The Beast with 1,000,000 Eyes, some great Vincent Price stuff, and a brilliant Roger Corman collection. I'll probably write all these up individually for Film Buff Stuff but it was just too good not to share here.

Thanks to Ken Begg for pointing these out.

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