LittleJon
LittleJon
LittleJon

I work in the digital imaging industry and I have a very trained eye for image quality defects and artifacts (so much so that when I went to see 176 hours, I immediately realized that it had been filmed using my last company's image sensor).

A pretzel! WTF is there a pretzel?

Indeed, but the narrator on the video says that there is no gravity in space. Whether he "needed" gravity or not, it was there!

Of course there IS gravity in space fool!

The 1925 patent by J. E. Lilenfield in 1925 that you make reference to was for the Field Effect Transistor (FET), which is the building block of all the modern digital chips that people know (CPUs, GPUs, memories, etc.). Back in 1925 or even in 1947, semiconductor materials could not be made sufficiently pure to build

I saw it last night (in 48fps, 3D, Dolby Atmos) and thought it was great. Real life doesn't have a frame rate, so I'm not wedded to 24fps.

Looks pretty cheesy and cliched too me! Did I see yet another set piece on the Golden Gate Bridge?

Where's your counter data then?

Perhaps the economic woes are in part due to that graph. Look at it!

Oh, right. Because Obama is really doing that isn't he?

If it says so on a blog, it must be true.

Americans have a long tradition of sycophancy towards presidents. The only thing that's changed in an absurd level of political polarization.

What's really scary is that this story is considered worthy of a national news network like ABC. (Who right this moment is running the earth-shattering headline, "Novak Djokovic Buys Up World’s Supply of Donkey Cheese". I kid you not!)

It is when referring to driving skills!

Civilian bombing started by accident. Some German pilots on a mission to bomb military targets got lost in bad weather and decided to shed their payload and head for home. Little did they know that they were over London at the time.

This is pretty standard in the world of military contracts. I spent over 5 years feeding on the crumbs that fall from the military R&D table and I was appalled by the waste of money I saw and heard of from people who had spent a lifetime working in the field.

I'm pleased to see that my old university is doing such great work, but as a Brit living in the US, I should warn them that the aesthetic (and Americans - it's pronounced "as-thet-ic", not "as-stet-ic") evaluation criteria may not apply universally. Americans favor a significantly higher decoration level than do

What makes you think only the Chinese government would do that?

Is see they're part of that Japanese blood type BS.

Another Hollywood movie with a British bad guy?