Archive for December 8th, 2007

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There’s been a persistent rumor for months that the Bond producers had figured out a way to smuggle Eva Green into the next Bond film, still titled Bond 22 at this point — the rumor was that the deceased Vesper Lynd would appear at some point in a pre-recorded video message intended for James Bond, and this message would somehow spark the action and link the film back to the first film. Well, Green has now put that rumor to rest in a big interview with The Observer that ran this past weekend. Green specifically tells the paper that she will not be appearing in the film, but that “there will be pictures [of Vesper] and things like that. I don’t know who the Bond girl’s gonna be. I’m a bit jealous! I hope it will be terrible. I will be the love of his life!”

Commanderbond.net is running the Eva Green news as well as pointing to a recent interview with Daniel Craig for New York Daily News, in which he lets it be known that he’s now officially picking up his Bond 22 paychecks, doing stunt training in the run up to the January start-date. He also talks about seeing Casino Royale for the first time on an editing machine and breathing a sigh of relief over how well it turned out. He also tells the interviewer that he wants his Bond films to maintain a style that harkens back to the earliest entries in the Bond series, Dr. No and and From Russia With Love. “They had a style about them that was amazing and different,” Craig says. Bond 22 is currently being prepped for a November 7, 2008 release date.

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Yeah, the NES PC is old hat, but if you just can’t find the time to create one for yourself, why not pay some diligent soul for their hard work rather than living another month without one? Available via eBay, this finely crafted piece of art won’t crank through any of the latest PC titles, but it comes with plenty of horsepower (and peripherals) to handle all the emulation you can stand. Granted, Americans will have to fork over additional coinage to have it shipped in from France, but flooring a room full of nerds at your forthcoming holiday bash will most certainly make it worthwhile. Check out the auction along with an in-action video at the read link below.

[Via Technabob]

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

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Paperless boarding schemes aren’t exactly revolutionary, but they’re still far from common at US airports. Now, however, Continental Airlines has announced that it will be trialing a cellphone-based boarding setup at Houston’s Intercontinental Airport, which will enable single passengers (as in, one barcode per person, per device) to show personnel a jumbled mixture of blocks alongside their ID in order to hop on board. The three-month program will allow guinea pigs to receive a paper pass should their mobile / PDA run out of juice before boarding time approaches, and while hard plans for future use aren’t laid out, it was noted that the process could spread to other airlines and airports if things go smoothly.

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

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According to none other than Wired magazine, T-shirts have come into their own as a form of media, one that uniquely documents messages and stories, not to mention emergent technologies and companies changing the way we use the Internet. Here at Switched, we write a lot about these next-gen, “Web 2.0” companies and technologies, which include everyone from MySpace and Facebook to Twitter and even Google.

Given that we’re partial to t-shirts with nerdy, tech-infused jokes and terminology, we figured it was high time to find the best geek t-shirts specifically related to Web 2.0 speak (like the “Your Podcast is Lame” t-shirt, flickr user ericskiff, pictured above). So here, dear readers is our humble survey of the wild, cotton-meets-code world of Web 2.0 t-shirts. If anything, it’ll give you something cool to talk about during your podcast.

 

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… for today’s trailer. Today’s the day when a brand new Grand Theft Auto IV trailer will be unveiled to the world, and we have direct-feed screenshots from the upcoming video to share with you. Obviously, expectations are quite high for Rockstar’s first open-world crime drama of the new generation. We have to say, it looks quite good.

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Thanks for your support, Digg! Here’s the trailer:

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We already use Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) to search for information all over the web. Many of us use Google Earth to look at global satellite views, and Google Gmail for our email needs, and Google Docs & Spreadsheets for our online word processing and spreadsheets. Are we ready to use Google for our wireless voice and data telecommunication needs as well?

Google gets by on the backs of traditional telecom channels now, reaching hundreds of millions of customers over cable modems, DSL connections and T1 data lines from your local telecommunications cooperative. In a sense, the company bypasses everything it can to bring its services directly to each customer over a web browser. It’s not the same game in the wireless business, as larger wireless companies keep iron-fisted control over what customers can access and who can market to them directly.

Google’s intention to participate in the FCC’s 700-megaHertz radio spectrum auctions in January tells the world that it wants to bypass the wireless carriers and provide services directly to consumers yet again. No revenue sharing, no unrealistic demands meant to pad the bottom lines of wireless carriers while underserving customers — none of that.

Google has the cash and the fortitude to take on established telecom companies and give customers a much-needed alternative to tight controls over purchased wireless services. Wireless could be Google’s second act that makes it one of the most powerful companies in the U.S. (by some estimations, it’s already there).

Would you use Google as your wireless provider if given the choice? Will the company have too much control over information if it succeeds in becoming a player in wireless?

 

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It’s probably better we tell you now than halfway through the weekend. If you’ve been struggling to rise through the ranks in Call of Duty 4, fear not, as this weekend brings you good tidings of great joy — multiplayer games from Friday-Monday will yield double experience so you can get all that stuff you’ve wanted twice as fast. This is especially useful for us with the PS3 version, since we’ve had a hiccup or two along the way with the online mode of the game. So, even if you have finals next week, forget about that! It’s double experience, dude! If you don’t, then you’ve got no excuse to miss out, do you?

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Slash Talks 'Guitar Hero' and Technophobia

Slash is a busy guy. In fact, we’re not sure he’s had any down time since recording what may be the greatest debut album in the history of Rock ‘n’ Roll, the Guns n’ Roses classic ‘Appetite for Destruction.’ After the disintegration of the band and the hijacking of the name by a corn-rowed Axl Rose and a band of impostors ( whose next album ‘Chinese Democracy’ should be out some time before Armageddon), Slash went on to form Slash’s Snake Pit and play guitar on tracks for dozens of artists from Michael Jackson to Insane Clown Posse. And he just keeps adding to his repertoire. In addition to being the lead guitarist for Velvet Revolver, the top-hat-wearing axe slinger just co-authored a book (with Anthony Bozza) entitled ‘Slash‘ and appeared as a boss character in ‘Guitar Hero III.’ The rock legend was kind enough to sit and talk with us a bit about the book, Guitar Hero, and of course whether he prefers PC or Mac.

Switched: So what made you decide to write a book now?

Slash: I put the book out to sort of set the record straight on a lot of the story having to do with why I quit Guns ‘n’ Roses, and the band reuniting, and a lot of other subjects having to do with that band. Basically that’s what influenced my decision to write a book. Prior to that I had no interest in writing a book, even though people keep asking me. But after seeing all the attention that Guns ‘n’ Roses has garnered of late, all the misinformation that’s available to people, and all of the other, you know, falsehoods that are going on about a lot of different things, I just figured probably the only way I’d be able to do myself and the story any justice is to write it myself.

'Slash' by SlashSo it was less a thing of nostalgia and more, almost cathartic?

Well, you know, cathartic in a way. I don’t know how cathartic it was really, for myself, personally, but I think it’ll put some people’s minds at rest, especially people who are huge Guns ‘n’ Roses fans or who are fascinated by the phenomena that is Guns ‘n’ Roses.

It’s coming out just on the heels of the release of ‘Guitar Hero III,’ which you star in. Is the timing accidental?

(Laughs) It’s all accidental. I was working on the Velvet Revolver ‘Libertad’ record, when both these things… well, I started writing the book during the making of the record, and actually did the Guitar Hero thing a little bit prior to that. But they were all sort of done at the same time and they’re all coming out at the same time.

So how did you get involved with ‘Guitar Hero III?’

Activision [the game’s publisher] came up with the idea to have somebody in the rock world represent the game and they chose me to be their rock legend guy, which I thought was really flattering. And I was really overwhelmed and excited about the prospect of doing it because I’m a huge fan of the game. So I met with them and we shot some ideas back and forth and we rolled with it and it came out great. I got to write some music for it, I put some guitar solos on it, and I got a caricature of myself in the game. It’s way left-field for what I normally do, but at the same time it’s very relevant, and I’m really honored to be on the box, so to speak.

That sort of answers our next question, which is how much involvement was there really in making the game? It sounds as though it was more than just “walk in to the studio, get some pictures taken for the model, and go home.”

No, there were plenty t of hours spent outside my comfort zone to get this done properly. But, you know, it was an experience and it was fun as well.

Obviously, you’ve played the game, you said you enjoyed it. Did you find it tough to transition from playing the real guitar to playing Guitar Hero?

I’m not very good at it. I played it a little while ago this afternoon. And I played ‘Guitar Hero 2′ and I had a lot of time to sit with it and learn how to do it and I got pretty good at it until I beat the game. But I didn’t beat it on expert — I beat it on hard. And that took a lot of work. I think there’s something innately awkward about being a guitar player trying to playing ‘Guitar Hero.’ I think you play it by ear more than you do so by sight, which is the way that normal people play it. There really is that correlation between your fingers and what you’re looking at on screen, and I think for guitar players the way that you relate to it is really by ear and feel, which somehow doesn’t make your fingers land at the right place at the right time.

So what are you planning on getting the wife and kids for the holidays, gadget- or tech-wise this year?

I’ve been so busy, and everybody on my side of the fence has been so busy, what with touring and all the other stuff that’s going on right now. We haven’t really gotten into Christmas. We just escaped Halloween with me traveling all over the place and what not. So we haven’t really focused on Christmas yet.

Don’t even bring that up, you’re scaring the shit out of me.

(Laughs)

Is there any gadget that’s got you excited that you really want to get your hands on?

I’m not a huge gadget guy. I just got a new BlackBerry, you know, and I’m happy with that. And I just got a new Xbox 360 not too long ago and we were looking at some new games the other day just to see what’s out there. I got my new ‘Guitar Hero’ finally… I can’t think of anything off the top of my head, outside of some recording gear that I’m really looking out for getting.

Does the aversion to technology and gadgets extend to the music? Are you a Pro Tools guy?

NO, no, I’m really simple, and I don’t… I’m one of those people that if it’s something you don’t need, I can pretty much stay away from it. But as far as just toying around with technology for toying around’s sake, I’m not like that. I’m basically all about the simplest approach possible. The fewer manuals I have to read, the better and if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. So I use a lot of pretty much old gear and what not. The only thing I do need for recording is something simple that’s efficient, sounds good, can be taken on the road — that’s what I’m starting to shop for at this point. And something small that I can carry.

Is there anything that you carry with you, on tour or every day, like a BlackBerry or an iPod, that’s just attached to you 24/7?

Well the BlackBerry, as much as I hate to admit it, is an appendage for sure. And as far as the iPod goes… you know…I have an iPod and its got 1000 some-odd, if not more, songs on it. But I find that I like to just have, like, a handful of good CDs and use those. I haven’t really graduated to the iPod school of thinking (laughs). I think it’s too much of a song selection for me to figure out what I want to listen to.

We often find that’s true. You spend 15 minutes trying to decide what to listen to, and only five actually listening to anything.

Exactly… that’s my take on that.


One last simple question. Mac or PC?

Um.. I have both.

I feel comfortable with both, I carry my Mac around and have a PC at home.

OK, so Mac Book? Mac Pro?

Mac Pro…. Oh wait, wait, wait. No, you know what, I take that back. It’s a Mac Book. I almost got a Mac Pro, but I knew I wasn’t gonna use it to its full potential. so…

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Toys always invite for reflection, but toys within the contemporary art context bring another dimension. I select these ones featured on Artnet.

I also author another blog that reflects this passion of mine!


Therapeutic children’s toys by Renate Müller & Helene Haeusler, 1960.
Materials: Canvas, leather, wear

A 39cm high camel, a dice of 29.5 x 30 x 32 cm and an Hippopotamus of 35 x 75 x 34 cm.


Detail Song of the Finsh (The Bride) Jigsaw Puzzle by Isabel Samaras. The stories of Monsters and the mystical lives they lead …


Benny and Red Bird Color Version by Kathy Olivas

(…) Many of the toys show a meticulous care in their creation; they are mechanically functional and cleverly conceived to move, lift or turn. I consider them to be truly remarkable in their abilities to function as well as being aesthetically pleasing. The enormous creative potential inherent in each piece became a challenge that I could not resist. Initially the toys were seen as individual objects, as the series developed, so did the thematic complexity. I did not realize that it would lead me on a journey of re-discovering my own childhood - Sidney Menkes

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five jars of apple-pear butter
Yesterday, for the first time ever in my entire life, I canned. I’ve been watching my mom can jam for years, so it wasn’t a totally foreign process to me, but I had never done it on my own from start to finish before. I don’t think words can express just how satisfying it was to hear the snap when the cans sealed. When they were all finished, I kept going into the kitchen to tap on the lids, just to hear the pleasing dull ring that means that they were properly sealed.

The reason I was canning is that I started a batch of apple-pear (the apples were the last of the ones that Scott and I picked for the second episode of Slashfood in the Kitchen) butter on Tuesday that took until Wednesday to finish. Sadly I was overconfident and didn’t call my mom for advice. Had I touched base with her before I started, I would have been reminded that she cooks the apples for a bit and then strains them in a small-holed colander for a while to get some of the liquid out before pureeing and cooking them down. The way I did it, it took nearly 10 hours of cooking before it had simmered down to the right consistency (my stove didn’t help matters as it doesn’t do the long, slow simmer very well). However, it doesn’t matter, as it all turned out and I now have five jars of really delicious apple-pear butter to give as gifts this holiday season.

Continue reading Homemade apple-pear butter

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