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LaBruce's previous feature Otto; Or, Up With Dead People blazed a sexually explicit, undead trail around the globe. The film would eventually screen at more than one hundred and fifty festivals, leaving patrons either in awe or in shock or, in some cases, rather angered. But regardless of individual responses, LaBruce was so taken with the experience that he was heard proudly proclaiming that "zombie porn is the wave of the future." And now, to prove himself correct, he's back with a second gay zombie opus.
Monatsarchiv für Oktober 2009
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An archive of the New York Times Magazine and other materials will be encoded into the DNA of cockroaches which will be released in Manhattan.
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Ein klingender, volltönender Polit-Kommentar von Tom Hintner.
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While some might believe that Walt Disney had the first feature-length animated film with Snow White and the Seven Dwarves in 1937, the Disney film is the fourth animated feature-length film, and was two decades late for first place. The first two animated feature-length films were directed by an Italian in Argentia in 1917 and 1918, though all prints of those films are presumed lost or destroyed. The third animated full-length feature, Die Abenteuer des Prinzen Achmed (The Adventures of Prince Achmed), came out the same year that the first two were lost to fire. This third animated film was a silhouette animation made by a German artist named Lotte Reiniger. The original negatives are considered lost, but a supposedly first-generation positive (from the camera negative) remains and the film has been restored from this stock (full film with limited subtitles, 5 minute preview with English subtitles and the full film viewable with Veoh plug-in). More information and videos inside.
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From Radiant City to Mega City One, the Architects’ Journal presents a selection of the greatest illustrated urban spaces.
The makers of the eerily lifelike robotic mule have a new creation: a machine that walks around like a real human being. Boston Dynamics is building the “Petman” prototype for the U.S. Army, to test out protective clothing.
“Petman will balance itself and move freely; walking, crawling and doing a variety of suit-stressing calisthenics during exposure to chemical warfare agents,” the company promises. “Petman will also simulate human physiology within the protective suit by controlling temperature, humidity and sweating when necessary, all to provide realistic test conditions. ”
Like Boston Dynamics’ BigDog robo-mule, Petman stays upright, even when it’s shoved. And the thing walks heel-to-toe at 3.2 miles per hour, just like a flesh-and-blood person. Petman may be just one of a number of attempts by robot-makers to build a simulated set of biped legs. But I haven’t seen one that gets closer to the real deal.
Eine Übersetzung findet sich hier
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1 1/2 Jahre aus dem E-Mail-Verkehr des Neonazis Nico Schneider gesammelt und ausgewertet
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19 stories and one introduction attempting to reconcile mainstream literature that's science fiction and science fiction that's accepted by the mainstream.













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