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Amazing Mod Double Feature: GTA IV and Oblivion Overhauls Blow Minds, Graphics Cards

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We’re all for peeling the cobwebs off our old games and firing a few blasts at the past, but let’s face it: rare is the game that ages gracefully. However, while owners of Lower Platforms are forced to endure hideous textures and lighting techniques originally employed by the ancient Egyptians, PC gamers get mods. And every once in a while, a mod comes along that successfully vaults over “Hey, that’s… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Maximum PC all RSS Feed Discovery Date : 06/07/2011 00:40 Number of articles : 2

Amazing Mod Double Feature: GTA IV and Oblivion Overhauls Blow Minds, Graphics Cards

pictures of justin bieber smiling

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HTC Sense pre-cached maps

HTC Sense pre-cached maps By engadget Tags : htc , maps , pre-cached , sense

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HTC Sense pre-cached maps

Nokia Developers Developers Developers

Nokia Developers Developers Developers By engadget Tags : developers , elop , nokia , stephen

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Nokia Developers Developers Developers

Windows Phone 7 appears on Rachel Zoe Project commercial

Windows Phone 7 appears on Rachel Zoe Project September 2010 By engadget Tags : engadget , engadget video , microsoft , smartphone , video , windows phone 7 , wp7

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Windows Phone 7 appears on Rachel Zoe Project commercial

IE9 Graphics Acceleration

IE9 Graphics Acceleration By engadget Tags : IE(

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IE9 Graphics Acceleration

‘Scott Pilgrim’: Inside The Creation Of The Six Fights

Visual-effects supervisor Frazer Churchill gives us behind-the-scenes scoop on the technology used in the film. By Eric Ditzian Mark Webber and Michael Cera in “Scott Pilgrim vs. The World” Photo: Universal Pictures “It was all pretty tricky.” That’s how “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” visual-effects supervisor Frazer Churchill describes the film’s imitable look — part manga, part 16-bit video game, exploding on every frame with bright colors and pulsing graphics. That’s also a crazy understatement. Each of the film’s fight scenes offers a master class in the very latest in moviemaking technology, from the use of cutting-edge CG software to on-the-ground practical effects work. “Tricky” is putting it lightly. It was damn hard work, and although “Scott Pilgrim” performed disappointingly at the box office this weekend — opening to just $10.5 million in ticket sales — what director Edgar Wright and his team managed to pull off on the screen is deserving of wide acclaim. Last week, Churchill called up MTV News to chat about the film’s six fight scenes — each one a battle as Scott (Michael Cera) attempts to defeat the evil exes of his true love, Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) — and reveal the secrets about each one’s creation (Beware of spoilers below). First Fight: Matthew Patel Of the six fights, this one was the most challenging. It begins when Pilgrim’s band is playing a concert only to be interrupted by a very angry and acrobatic Patel. From a technical standpoint, the difficulty came from merging so many elements: kung fu choreography, a CG Bollywood dance routine, women hurling fireballs and more. “It’s the most piecemeal in its construction,” Churchill said. “Lots of blue-screen photography, matte painting, stunt work and CG. When Scott jumps off the stage into that manga-esque vortex, that’s made up of motion picture photography done on-set, digital still photography, and graphics and speed lines drawn by hand from what Edgar’s brother, Oscar Wright, who was the concept designer, gave us. I shot with the second unit DP for an entire day just to get the scrolling backgrounds.” “When you put it together, you have these very high-tech images with a very low-fi feel, which is part of the appeal of ‘Scott Pilgrim’ and its camp, manga, 16-bit feel,” he explained. Second Fight: Lucas Lee Throughout the shoot, Wright placed an emphasis on stage craft, always wanting there to be a physical manifestation of an effect that would be added in post-production. Perhaps at no time did that emphasis become more intricate than during Pilgrim’s battle with Lee (Chris Evans). “That was such a complex set of challenges,” Churchill said. “We were shooting with actors and a lot of stunt performers. We shot a lot of high-speed stuff in front of a blue screen. Whenever the image flashes in the finished shots — every punch, sword clash or something — those were actually flashes that we had on-set with photo flashbulbs. We got through over 7,000 bulbs — you can only use them once — and then we add our own flash with CG. When someone dies and bursts into coins, we’d empty buckets of silver Mylar so the actors had something to react to. You get that marriage of digital and physical effects.” Third Fight: Todd Ingram Todd (Brandon Routh) is a rival musician whose superpowers emanate from his vegan diet. In the graphic novels on which the film is based, those powers are represented by just a series of rings. That sort of simplicity wouldn’t work for the movie. “We needed something more sophisticated,” Churchill explained. “Our reference for it was that old logo for RKO Pictures with the radio transmitter. We made the rings feel uneven and have these optical aberrations with color bursts.” “There’s also this complicated shot where Scott gets thrown through a brick wall,” he continued. “One pass is shot with a camera close to Todd and then the action is shot again with a wide shot, so that when Scott is thrown and the shot snaps back from tight to wide, that’s actually a morph from two different camera positions. Michael is there on a rig being thrown across the room, and then we take over with a digital version of Michael to go through the pre-made hole in the wall, and then there’s a stunt person on a rig flying through the wall, and we add digital debris.” Fourth Fight: Roxy Richter Roxy (Mae Whitman) is a ninja capable of disappearing into thin air. The trick for Wright and Churchill was to make those disappearances visually compelling. “When she disappears, we bring in a blue screen so then we can erase her in the shot,” Churchill said. “We add in black CG smoke and we also wanted something more, so there’s white smoke too, which was a practical effect that we did on-set, as well as those flashbulbs. Plus we did a lot of lens flares and movement graphics. We spent a whole day just flashing different lights at the camera so we’d have a lot of stuff to work with.” For her fight scene, Whitman didn’t have to mess around with any dangerous weaponry. “She’s actually fighting with a pink ribbon,” Churchill said. “She learned to ribbon dance. Then we replaced the ribbon with a CG razor belt.” Fifth Fight: Kyle and Ken Katayanagi The fifth fight again takes place during a concert, as Scott’s band and the Katayanagi twins battle with their music: Sound waves cause physical destruction and giant monsters eventually appear to help in the fight. To get those effects right, filmmakers actually had to create an entirely new computer program. “Wherever the band plays, there’s visualized music. We wanted that to feel like it was happening in time to the music,” Churchill explained. “Our CG supervisor, Andrew Whitehurst, wrote this piece of software that we called the Wave Form Generator. Nigel Godrich, the music supervisor, would break down the tracks into their separate components, give us the rhythm, the base, the drums, the vocals, and we would use them to drive the animation. The software would convert these sound stems into animation data, so when the band is playing, the graphics and the dragons are moving in time with the music.” “For the dragons, I had these weather balloons on-set so that people would have something to react to,” he added.” I’d raise them up however high they needed to be. Whenever we did the fights, we’d have music playing back on-set. It was like a music video.” Sixth Fight: Gideon Gordon Graves This climactic fight, which takes place in a nightclub with a “Super Mario Brother”-style brick pyramid in the middle, was an exhausting affair. “Oh my god — we were on that pyramid for weeks,” Churchill said. “The heat rises. It was intense. Again we had physical manifestations of the digital effects — a lot of photo flashes, and Scott’s sword had red LEDs and we added flames and the sword. All the stuff that looked like manga was shot on a blue screen. There was a ton of choreography and stunt work. There are just all these additional layers of craziness.” The fight ends with Scott triumphant and Gideon flickering as if caught in some kind of computer glitch. While Wright storyboarded each scene well in advance, this flickering effect was something he came up with in the editing room. “That wasn’t planned. That came up in post,” Churchill said. “When Edgar was cutting the scene, he wanted a suitable end for Gideon. He came up with this idea of him glitching and malfunctioning. He’s breaking down.” “The thing about the film is each fight is completely different,” he continued. “It’s not like you establish one thing and then you redo it over and over. Each fight required us to create a whole new set design, a whole new look, a whole new way of doing things.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ Clips ‘Scott Pilgrim’ Takes Over The World Related Photos ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’

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‘Scott Pilgrim’: Inside The Creation Of The Six Fights

Did MSNBC Adjust Website in Response to Dallas Tea Party’s Criticism?

Is MSNBC concerned about charges of a lack of racial diversity among its on-air staff? Perhaps the cable network is realizing that its glass house is increasingly at risk of shattering from all the stones it keeps hurling at the allegedly-racist Tea Party movement. The folks at Inside Cable News noticed a slight change in the header at the MSNBC TV homepage. See if you can spot it in the picture at right. It shouldn’t be that hard; the folks at the cable network put Tamron Hall front and center in a bright pink shirt ( click here for a larger image of the new header). Did MSNBC add Hall in an effort to satiate critics who have pointed out the lack of racial diversity on the cable network? Though ICN notes the comical video produced by the Dallas Tea Party, the Congressional Black Caucus has also chided MSNBC for its lily-white staff. Many such critiques were directly aimed at Keith Olbermann, who suggested that Tea Party protesters were racist because only white people attended their rallies. “Where are they?” asked an overdramatic Olbermann. The Dallas Tea Party countered with its own video noting the on-air whiteness of NBC’s TV holdings. Other conservative commentators, such as blogger Broliath , created their own videos to a similar effect, noting that even the guests on “Countdown” were overwhelmingly white. And as mentioned above, even the Congressional Black Caucus weighed in . According to Main Justice, CBC member Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, asked NBC president Jeff Zucker why there wasn’t “any black programming on NBC.” She added: “Is there some assumption that black programming is not profitable?” But is Hall’s conspicuous presence in the new website header — which was not present as late as April —  a response to MSNBC’s critics? Well, Zucker did tell Jackson Lee that “diversity was one of his strategic goals and that the company was trying to do better.” Furthermore, as ICN notes: …Hall’s inclusion with the “Heavy Hitters” of MSNBC is a bit strange. MSNBC has never before bothered to put any of its M-FR dayside news talent in with the ones that get all the attention. It’s not like Hall’s two hours are fundamentally different in either format or subject matter from what airs at 10, 12, or 3pm ET aside from the fact that they still have segments from inside the control room. So the question arises: Why put Hall up front and center, literally center in this case, with a picture that is fundamentally different from the subdued wardrobe theme that everyone else is sporting (which just about guarantees that Hall is the one you’re going to notice first because her picture sticks out so)? This is, after all, the same cable network whose on-air staff confused Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton .

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Did MSNBC Adjust Website in Response to Dallas Tea Party’s Criticism?

Dylan Ratigan Shouts Down Conservative Guest for Objecting to Liberal Dogma

On his July 20 afternoon program, Dylan Ratigan shouted down the Washington Examiner’s J.P. Freire for challenging the MSNBC host’s liberal orthodoxy and accusing him of giving more air time to the liberal panelist appearing opposite him. Eschewing any sense of balanced reporting, Ratigan thundered: “I said I’m in charge of the show. I decide who I’ll talk to. I might spend the entire time talking to Jonathan Capehart and not talk to you at all. And then you can choose never to come on my show again.” “I’m sorry, Jonathan was taking up a lot of my time earlier in the segment,” explained Freire. “Look at the amount of time he’s been talking and the amount of time I was talking.” Discussing institutionalized racism in America, Freire attempted to argue that a “government monopoly on education” hinders the ability of ethnic minorities to succeed, but the liberal agitator was only interested in Washington Post editorial writer Jonathan Capehart’s liberal spin on the issue and instructed Freire to “please be quiet” before berating him. “Who’s hosts the show, J.P.?” asked Ratigan. “Just because you’re on my show doesn’t mean you get as much time as you decide you want. Do you understand that?” Freire fired back: “What I’ll do is I’ll interrupt if I have something to say.”              “Right and I’ll tell you to be quiet if someone else is speaking,” sputtered Ratigan, who seemed all to eager to assert his authority with a conservative guest while defending the right of the liberal guest to speak freely. A transcript of the relevant portion of the segment can be found below: MSNBC Dylan Ratigan July 20, 2010 4:19 P.M. E.S.T. DYLAN RATIGAN: I’m not saying there’s some grand racist in the sky who is doing that. J.P. FREIRE, Washington Examiner associate editor: But it’s somehow systematic? RATIGAN: It’s systematic in that the way our education resources are distributed, the way our law enforcement practice is distributed, the way our populations are distributed, these things yield themselves out. That is not good for America, period. So how do you deal with that? FREIRE: Well look, I think that maybe the expectation is that a conservative is going to go on the air and say everything is hunky-dory. RATIGAN: Hold on, J.P. I like you, I like you, I like you, I’m not jumping to any conclusions about you, I’m taking your words at face value. I expect you’ll do the same with me. I want you to pretend you’re not on MSNBC; I want you to pretend you’re talking to your friends Dylan and Jonathan. Okay, can you do that? FREIRE: Yeah sure, absolutely. Yo Dylan and John, I was thinking today that the idea that there are so many systems in place that do make it so difficult for people that are underprivileged to succeed in this country is because we constantly put in place more and more systems and that more people are saying “hey, if we fiddle with these systems, maybe it will give us the right output.” The best way to allow people to rise up is by getting out of the way. It’s not that we’ve made it easier for white people to get along – RATIGAN: So how are we getting out of the way if we have 19,000 different school districts, some of which are incredibly well capitalized and can yield the finest education in the history of the world, and the vast majority of which have no money – FREIRE: Easy, a government monopoly on education. RATIGAN: Hold on a second. Say that again. FREIRE: A government monopoly on education is precisely how we make it more difficult for blacks and Latinos and many other ethnic groups and the poor to be able to rise up. I mean, that is how we get in the way. If we really want to – RATIGAN: So you’re saying the fact that rich people can take all of their kids out of the schools in the cities – FREIRE: Oh, heavens… RATIGAN: and leave ghetto schools uptown here in New York. No, not “oh heavens” J.P., I’ve lived in New York for almost twenty years, I have many friends who have children here, I have many friends who have grown up here and I can tell you the rich ones went to private schools and the poor ones didn’t and the more, anyway. You get the last word here, Jonathan. How do you view the systematic aspect of this? JONATHAN CAPEHART, Washington Post: Look, the systematic aspects, you laid them out, your graphics show the wide disparities there. My big concern is we spend a lot of time hurling accusations of racism and things like that and we allow that to get in way of having a really meaningful, deep conversation – FREIRE: A very difficult conversation. RATIGAN: J.P. please be quiet. FREIRE: I’m sorry, Jonathan was taking up a lot of my time earlier in the segment. RATIGAN: J.P., you know what? I want you to be part of this, I really really do. FREIRE: No, Jonathan has blockaded my entire part. RATIGAN: J.P., you’re not behaving in a way that’s constructive and I don’t know why that is but I do appreciate. FREIRE: Look at the amount of time he’s been talking and the amount of time I was talking. RATIGAN: Who’s hosts the show, J.P.? FREIRE: I’m just saying. RATIGAN: Who’s hosts the show, J.P.? FREIRE: If you’re saying it’s equal time, it should be equal time. RATIGAN: Did I say that? I said I’m in charge of the show. I decide who I’ll talk to. I might spend the entire time talking to Jonathan Capehart and not talk to you at all. And then you can choose never to come on my show again. FREIRE: I would never do that, I love being on your show. RATIGAN: Just because you’re on my show doesn’t mean you get as much time as you decide you want. Do you understand that? FREIRE: What I’ll do is I’ll interrupt if I have something to say. RATIGAN: Right and I’ll tell you to be quiet if someone else is speaking. FREIRE: Okay. RATIGAN: Coming up, I was concerned that might happen. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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Dylan Ratigan Shouts Down Conservative Guest for Objecting to Liberal Dogma

Microsoft Announces Xbox Live Arcade Winners

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