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Strangely Familiar – Under the Skin

Under the Skin channels Kubrick's disturbing sense of the alien, mesmerising the viewer in a vouyeristic echo of the way Scarlett Johansenn's character lures her the loners she encounters to her.

Under the Skin channels Kubrick’s disturbing sense of the alien, mesmerizing the viewer in a voyeuristic echo of the way Scarlett Johansson’s character lures her the loners she encounters to her.

I caught a showing of Under the Skin recently while visiting my nephew Jon at college in Austin. On the one hand he wasn’t in love with the minimalist science fiction flick, despite the exposure of Scarlett Johansson’s titular assets, but after walking back from the art house we saw it at to the co-op he’s living in, he allowed that it had managed to provide an hour’s worth of discussion. So that’s something.

Set in Scotland, both urban and rural, amidst pervasive mist and rain, Scarlett Johansson’s alien wrapped in human flesh prowls the streets, backroads, and beaches looking for unattached males to entice back to her place. When you put it that way, it sounds more like a serial killer movie than science fiction, and you can look at it that way too, because the challenge presented to the audience is to get inside the creature’s head to understand what’s going on. There’s no FBI profiler explaining the parameters that lump her victims into a tidy package which exposes the psychological underpinnings of the killer offered up. Instead, the script gives us as little information as possible, forcing us to watch the glacial flow of scenes intently so as not to miss the little clues. You will, by the way. Continue reading

OPMH Sunday Morning April 27th

I was early morning greeter for OPMH today, and as Sprint had just replaced my HTC One to correct a problem with the camera…

Breakthrough by Michael C. Grumley

Breakthrough by Michael C. Grumley
John Clay is a Navy geek working out of the Pentagon who gets a call to look into how a nuclear submarine could find itself suddenly fifteen miles off course while cruising in the Caribbean. Alison Shaw is a dolphin researcher working on machine translation to provide communication between us and our flippered friends. He’s not having any luck figuring out why that area is causing weird things to happen to ships, robots, and the ocean itself, while she’s having unhoped for success with her research, which maps the dolphin’s motions and sounds in situational context to enable two way communication. He’s Navy. She has a bad taste in her mouth from the last time the government appropriated her research, not to mention the Vietnam era dolphin bomb project. Naturally he winds up turning to her and her team to help figure out what’s at the bottom of the mystery. And why the ocean level is dropping, despite global warming. It’s not a bad read, and it’s not really mil sf, mostly. Call it a techo-thriller. Fans of Startide Rising (David Brin) and anything by Clive Cussler will like it pretty well. I gave it a 3 out of 5.

The iPhone’s Shrinking Niche

Diagonal Image Sizes: HTC One Max (5.9), HTC One (4.8), iPhone 5s (4.0)

Diagonal Image Sizes: HTC One Max (5.9), HTC One (4.8), iPhone 5s (4.0) The iPhone 6 is rumored to have a 4.7 inch screen, bringing it into line with Android’s standard size.

Yesterday I went down to the Sprint store to pick up a replacement for my Android HTC One smartphone and came away with a sense that Apple’s iPhone has become a niche product.

My HTC One had developed an annoying inability to focus across it’s entire field of view so they replaced it. The new one works fine, thanks.

While they were loading my contacts in my phone, which was unnecessary since they’re backed up to my Google account, I browsed the displays and see if I could generate some techno-lust for a new phone. While there were Android phones in a wide range of sizes, from minis like Samsung’s Galaxy  S4 mini (4.3” Super AMOLED display (960x 540)) to “Phablets,” like the LG Flex with its brilliant curved 6.0″ HD OLED  Screen, I decided I was still happy with my current phone.

But I was dismayed by the iPhone offerings. Granted, there’s only one company putting out the iPhone, so they only need one display rather than the side by side displays for largely equivalent products from HTC, Motorola, Samsung, and Sprint, but instead of the range of phones available within each of those brands, Apple’s idea of variety gives you options in color, metal or plastic, and some performance specs.

All with a screen size that hasn’t changed much since it was an iPod. Granted that its resolution has been jumped up from the original 320×480 to 640 x 1136, but still only managing a 4 inch diagonal on the iPhone 5. Of course, Apple’s nobody’s fool, and it looks very much like their next phone,  the iPhone 6, will have a 4.7 inch display, much more in line with the majority of Android devices.

But even so, Apple is playing catch-up.

The problem with cosying up to early adopting hipsters is that you build a barrier between yourself and the great unwashed, which may not be up for paying premium prices for the first ever gizmo, but make up for it by buying a lot more when the product becomes commoditized.

While I was entering the store, a sales rep was explaining to the guy in in front of me in the intake queue how he could free up memory on his phone, explaining some of the Android features at the same time, with the caveat, “Unless you switch over to an iPhone.”

To which he burst out with, “Hell no.” More of a wry disclaimer than a rant, but pretty much the last word on the subject.

Links / References

  • http://www.forbes.com/sites/anthonykosner/2014/04/24/the-sleek-large-screen-iphone-6-emerges-as-the-leaks-suddenly-get-physical/

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