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Archive for April, 2009

Geek Media Round-Up: April 21, 2009

Apr 20 2009 No Comment  20 views

Film

  • The 7Touch Group discusses Science Fiction Throughout the Ages and Into the Future.
  • Ask Men has posted a gallery of the Top Ten Credit Sequences of all time.
  • Fantasy Magazine shares a list of the Top Ten Miscastings in Fantasy Movies. My favorite is number four: “Everyone in the Star Wars prequels.”
  • It turns out that Paramount is struggling to attract the younger demographics to Star Trek.
  • Premiere’s list of Movie Stars Who Die the Most is a great concept, but, I’m sorry to say, it’s also a big load of FAIL. Because, as we all know, Bill Murray ought to top the for Groundhog Day alone.

Internet

  • According to a new study, 66.3 Million US TV Viewers are Simultaneously Using a PC While Watching TV, including a third of men.
  • Dork Yearbook is an entire site devoted to old, embarrassing photos of nerdy kids.
  • In the latest episode of Jeff Talks to God, Jeff asks Do Wormholes really exist? Hilarity ensues.
  • Top 10 Results We’d Like to See From the Rise of the Geeks

Literature

  • Free Fiction: Read “The Ascendant” by Ted Kosmatka at Subterranean Online.

Television

  • Daily P.O.P. reflects on Dr Who and the Sonic Screwdriver, pointing out that it was only when Russell T. Davies took over Doctor Who that the Sonic Screwdriver became capable of doing anything. For which I say thank-you Mr. Davies.
  • Say it’s not so! The Omaha Sci-Fi Examiner asks Will the Great Recession kill my favorite sci-fi?




Teaser Trailer: 9

Apr 20 2009 No Comment  26 views

Another clip of Tim Burton’s upcoming film 9 has hit the web, and it still looks pretty bad-ass. I had been figuring that the first clip had contained all the best action sequences, but this may end up being one of those uber-rare cartoons that holds your attention from beginning to end.

9 hits the theaters this September.

This Day in Geek History: April 20

Apr 20 2009 2 Comments  1,130 views

1841
Edgar Allan Poe “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” by Edgar Allan Poe is published by Graham’s Magazine in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It will widely be considered the first detective story. Read the story online at Project Gutenberg.

1876
The first national chemical society in the United States, the American Chemical Society, is organized in New York City. Visit the official American Chemical Society website.

1902
Pierre and Marie Curie isolate one gram of radium, the first sample of a radioactive element. They refined it from eight tons of pitchblende ore.

1926
Western Electric and Warner Bros. introduce Vitaphone, a process to add sound to film.

1939
David Sarnoff introducing commercial television David Sarnoff, president of Radio Corporation of America (RCA), delivers a speech to an NBC camera announcing the launch of regular public television service with the formal opening of the 1939 New York World’s Fair in Flushing, New York on April 30th. “Now we add radio sight to sound. It is with a feeling of humbleness that I come to this moment of announcing the birth in this country of a new art so important in its implications that it is bound to affect all society. It is an art which shines like a torch of hope in a troubled world. It is a creative force which we must learn to utilize for the benifit of all mankind.” The speech is broadcast by RCA subsidiary NBC to two hundred televisions across the state of New York. Despite its miniscule audience, the event marks the birth of commercial television. By the end of the year, a thousand receivers will be sold in the US. Screens are initially only about five inches across.
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Geek Quote of the Day

Apr 20 2009 No Comment  5 views

Even a broken clock gets it right occasionally.

      - Turn Coat, book eleven of The Dresden Files, by Jim Butcher, 2009.
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This Day in Geek History: April 19

Apr 19 2009 7 Comments  353 views

1928
The final volume of the Oxford English Dictionary is published. Read more about the history of the Oxford English Dictionary. Visit the official Oxford English Dictionary website.

1957
FORTRAN ManualHerbert Bright, the manager of the data processing center at Westinghouse in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania receives a stack of computer punch cards in the mail from the FORTRAN development team at International Business Machines (IBM). Guessing the unlabeled cards to be a compiler for FORTRAN, the world’s first computer programming language, he writes a small missing comma diagnostic in FORTRAN and runs it on his IBM 704 mainframe. The event marks the first time that FORTRAN has been used outside IBM, “in the wild.” The 704 requires its operating system to be loaded from a tape before each use, and from beginning to end, creating and executing the program requires between two and four hours. The name for the language is an amalgam of the words “FORmula TRANslator.” It will go on to be the first successful high-level programming language.

1965
Electronics magazine publishes an article by Gordon Moore, head of research and development for Fairchild Semiconductor, on the future of semiconductor components. In the article, Moore predicts that transistor density on integrated circuits will double every eighteen months for the next ten years. This theory would eventually come to be known as Moore’s law.

The Salyut 1 space station1971
Salyut 1 is launched on a Proton rocket by the Soviet Union. Although it consists of only a single module, it becomes the first space station to orbit Earth. Salyut 1 will reenter Earth’s atmosphere on October 11, 1971, to be followed by six more future Salyut stations.
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Geek Quote of the Day

Apr 19 2009 No Comment  10 views

You’re in America now. Our idea of diplomacy is showing up with a gun in one hand and a sandwich in the other and asking which you’d prefer.

      - Turn Coat, book eleven of The Dresden Files, by Jim Butcher, 2009.

Geek Quote of the Day

Apr 18 2009 No Comment  16 views

If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.

      - Albert Einstein


This Day in Geek History: April 18

Apr 18 2009 No Comment  10 views

1846
R.E. House of New York City“>New York City is granted a patent for the first telegraph ticker capable of printing messages as letters, rather than Morse code, at the rate of approximately fifty words per minute. (US No. 4,464)

1925
The first commercial transcontinental radio transmission of a radio facsimile in the United States is sent from San Francisco, California to New York City“>New York City. The facsimile is a photograph of Louis B. Mayer of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures giving actress Marion Davies a make-up box.

1950
Albert EinsteinAn Avro Canada jetliner becomes the first international jet passenger flight to arrive in the United States, traveling from Malton Airport in Toronto, Canada to the International Airport in New York City. The flight caries three crew members, three passengers, and fifteen thousand airmail letters. The flight lasts one hour and travels a distance of 359 miles.

1955
Albert Einstein dies of heart disease while asleep in a Princeton, New Jersey hospital bed, at 1:15am, just a month after his 76th birthday. Princeton’s newspaper, The Daily Princetonian breaks the news, publishing a special edition just hours after his death. Read an archived version of the headline obituary at The Daily Princetonian archives.
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