Sunday, June 23, 2013

94% Room 237

All Critics (119) | Top Critics (32) | Fresh (112) | Rotten (7) | DVD (1)

A curious and entertaining documentary.

The human brain is a marvellously suggestible organ.

[A] strange, frustrating, occasionally fascinating doc ...

"Room 237" evolves from an ode to movie love at its most delirious to a wry examination of the crackpot mind at work.

There's enough real evidence supporting the theory that Kubrick was a genius, and that's pretty entertaining all by itself.

It's about the human need for stuff to make sense - especially overpowering emotional experiences - and the tendency for some people to take that sense-making to extremes.

An intellectual exercise, and an entertaining one, especially for those who don't want to label The Shining as just a ghost story.

It has the same entertainment value as listening to a late-night radio host indulge his listeners on Roswell, Area 51 and 9/11. Everything sounds completely crackers, until it all makes crazy sense.

What emerges from Room 237 is not a denigration of conspiracies, but a kind of celebration of our ability to create patterns where (perhaps) none exist.

"Room 237" could become an essential companion piece to "The Shining" from now on. For those who see both, it will be impossible to think about one without the other.

...all about the work of criticism - finding fresh avenues of delight.

Watching it makes you feel like you're attending a really entertaining film class where your classmates confidently let their freak flags fly.

It's an essay about the human need to reject the notion of a random universe and find order and meaning in existence. These people are developing their own creation myths, with Kubrick the mastermind responsible for the Intelligent Design.

Termitic film nerds could chow down for years on the wood chips.

You know when "Room 237? starts getting really scary? When the people in the film start making sense.

Kubrick fans and movie geeks will want to check this film out as soon as possible

Kubrick fans will take 'Shining' to 'Room 237.'

The credibility of these theories ranges from faintly plausible to frankly ridiculous, but Ascher isn't interested in judging them; his movie is more about the joys of deconstruction and the special kind of obsession that movies can inspire.

Some of the interpretations seem more of a stretch than others but all are entertainingly presented by director Rodney Ascher. (The movie) serves as a testament to Stanley Kubrick's cinematic mastery.

As fascinating as it is frustrating

No quotes approved yet for Room 237. Logged in users can submit quotes.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/room_237_2012/

higgs boson reggie bush pope Chris Cline New Pope Jeff Gordon Test Drive Veronica Mars

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Microsoft further builds up Iowa's tech cred - Northwest - The ...

By DAVID PITT | Associated Press ? Published June 21, 2013 Modified June 21, 2013

The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa ? Microsoft announced plans Friday to build another massive data center in Iowa, which has attracted some of the biggest names in computer technology by exempting crucial ingredients for processing and storage from sales taxes as well as offering cheap electricity.

The Iowa Economic Development Authority approved $20 million in job creation tax incentives for Microsoft, which plans on spending more than $677 million to build the first phase a project in West Des Moines, near its existing data center. Additional phases could be added later. The company plans on hiring 29 workers.

It's the third major information technology company to invest more than $1 billion in Iowa in recent years. Facebook and Google also have chosen Iowa for data centers - large buildings that house thousands of refrigerator-sized racks of computer servers, processors, hard drives, and other equipment.

The developments are being spurred by a 2009 law specifically covering data centers exempts electricity, computers and other equipment from sales taxes, and another law from the same year that exempts computers and other equipment - cooling systems, cooling towers and equipment related to electricity distribution or management - from property taxes.

Typically, cities and counties also offer property tax breaks in addition to building streets to the sites.

"Right now we're seeing data centers at this level continuing to scale up across the globe," said Iowa Economic Development Director Debi Durham. "Legislation Iowa put in place many years ago is creating this business climate."

Sales tax breaks are important for these companies because they equip data centers with costly computer servers and other equipment that must be replaced every three years, said Mark Bramfitt, an industry consultant who focuses on data center energy use. A server can cost $2,000 and a data center can have 20,000 or 30,000 of them - sometimes more.

Microsoft has spent about $200 million on its existing data center on 40 acres in West Des Moines, which opened last year and employs about 50 workers. Construction on the new one nearby will begin late this year and is expected to be finished by the end of 2015.

Microsoft's total spending is expected to reach about $1.2 billion when finished, Durham said. Elsewhere in the state, Google has a $600 million data center in Council Bluffs and recently committed to a second $700 million center. And Facebook is building a $300 million center near Altoona but says it could triple the size of the project to exceed $1 billion.

Each company received additional state tax breaks for creating jobs, including $20 million for Microsoft's latest project.

Far from threats of earthquakes and hurricanes, Iowa is also considered a prime location because the state can offer abundant electricity at a reasonable cost, Bramfitt said. The large data centers being built today demand between 20 megawatts and 40 megawatts of electricity, enough to power between 15,000 and 30,000 homes.

"They're tremendous energy users," Bramfitt said. "They require the juice of a small town."

The average retail industrial price for power in Iowa was 5.21 cents per kilowatt-hour in 2011, the latest year for which comparable data was available from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The only states with lower rates were Idaho and Utah, both at 5.10 cents per kilowatt-hour. The surrounding states of Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, and Nebraska all had rates exceeding 6 cents a kilowatt-hour.

Iowa also leads the nation in percentage of power generated from wind energy - 25 percent from more than 2,800 wind turbines - which is important to companies such as Microsoft, Facebook and Google. Microsoft said it will buy renewable energy credits to offset carbon emissions from its new data center. Google in 2010 entered into a long-term agreement to buy wind energy from a central Iowa wind farm, and last year, it invested $75 million in another one.

Data centers are important to companies such as Microsoft because of the increased use of cloud computing. Cloud computing allows the companies to provide massive computer processing and storage of photos, music and other data for customers using smartphones and tablet computers. Microsoft, for example, says it offers 200 services over the Internet, including its search engine Bing and Microsoft Office 365. The company also says it will require significant expansion of data center servers for its Xbox Live video game system.

Other companies that are heavily investing in data centers around the country include Apple, Amazon and eBay.

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2013/06/21/2594015/microsoft-seeks-to-build-another.html

detroit red wings jose canseco zimmerman derek fisher lyrid meteor shower hippocrates andrew breitbart

Russian ally Kyrgyzstan sets U.S. air base closure deadline

By Olga Dzyubenko

BISHKEK (Reuters) - Kyrgyzstan on Thursday gave the United States until July next year to shut its airforce base at Manas, a staging post for U.S. troops and supplies in the Afghanistan conflict but now deemed unnecessary as foreign forces pull out.

The move is likely to please Russia as it vies with the West and China for influence in the resource-rich region, once part of Soviet Central Asia.

Troops from NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) are preparing to leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014, ending a costly and increasingly unpopular war launched after the September 11, 2001, attacks by al-Qaeda on U.S. cities.

The Manas Transit Center outside the capital Bishkek, which numbers about 1,000 U.S. servicemen, has been in operation since the end of 2001. The Kyrgyz government said in a note issued prior to a vote in parliament: "Further functioning of this facility is unnecessary".

Parliament passed the law by 91 votes to five, setting a deadline of July 11, 2014, for the base to close.

Russia secured an extension of the lease of its own air base in Kyrgyzstan last September.

In the wake of the 2001 attacks, Moscow said it had no objections to the United States and its allies using Central Asia for deployment and transit of their troops and cargo to neighboring Afghanistan.

But the Kremlin later became wary of the growing foreign military presence in a region which was once its imperial backyard.

Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev, elected in 2011, has staked heavily on closer ties with Russia and repeatedly assured Moscow that the U.S. air base would be shut in 2014.

Visiting Bishkek last September, Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to write off nearly $500 million in debt from Kyrgyzstan in exchange for a package of deals that extended Moscow's economic and military foothold in the volatile nation.

This included a 15-year extension to Russia's lease of the Kant military air base outside Bishkek.

Kyrgyzstan, a mountainous nation of 5.5 million which lies on a drug trafficking route out of Afghanistan, has been hit by periodic bouts of violence and has seen two presidents deposed by revolts since 2005.

The economy, which contracted last year, relies heavily on a gold venture with Canada's Centerra Gold and cash remittances sent home by its migrant workers in Russia.

Ending its agreement on Manas with the United States, Kyrgyzstan will lose annually $60 million paid by Washington for the lease, and maybe more significant sums in indirect revenues from the base, parliamentarian Akmatbek Keldibekov told Reuters.

Kyrgyzstan is part of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (ODKB) of several post-Soviet states, which is led by Moscow. It is also a member of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation dominated by Russia and China.

"Politically, we won't renege on our commitments - we will stay with Russia both in the SCO and ODKB," Keldibekov said.

(Writing by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-ally-kyrgyzstan-sets-u-air-closure-deadline-121059105.html

cheney heart transplant weather san diego unitarian new black panther party lost in space elizabeth banks battle royale

Friday, June 21, 2013

Lake low: Youths pen Tanzania, Malawi Presidents to 'desist from ...


By Nyasa Times Reporter

June 20, 2013 ????? 15 Comments

Email This Post?Email This Post

Youth and Society, an advocate for peace, justice and peoples? rights?has called?upon the leadership and politicians of Malawi and Tanzania?to refrain from making inflammatory and irresponsible statements that would frustrate the peaceful process of resolving the dispute.

?We wish?to express our growing dismay over the on-going lake dispute between Malawi and Tanzania specifically in view of the recent developments that threaten the peaceful mediation process in which Tanzania intends to deploy two passenger ships on the disputed Lake?Malawi.

?As Youth advocates, we shall protest against any illicit intention by any government or politician to frustrate the peaceful mediation process,? the grouping said in a petition signed by Chairperson Charles Kajoloweka and Board member Emily Mkamanga.

Malawi claims sovereignty over the entire Lake Malawi, Africa?s third largest, based on the Helgoland Treaty, a colonial relic, while Tanzania claims under international law it is entitled to over 50 percent of the Lake known as Lake Nyasa in Tanzania.

Kajoloweka: Resolve the lake row amicably

Kajoloweka: Resolve the lake row amicably

The border row is more than 40 years old and resurfaced after Malawi discovered oil in the Lake.

The Mzuzu based group made their impassioned plea in a two-paged petition dated June 20, 2013 addressed to Malawian president Dr. Joyce Banda and her Tanzanian counterpart Jakaya Kikwete and copied to?the Chairman?SADC?forum for retired Heads of State?former Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano.

The Youths and Society group observed that the lake Border row?is gradually becoming a political campaign issue in Malawi and Tanzania in view of the Elections to be held in 2014 and 2015 respectively.

?The?leadership of the two countries needs to rise above mere party politics and swallow their pride and put the interest of the people first.?As young people?will not hesitate to voice out against any attempt by any leadership or institution to deliberately thwart the dialogue path?bearing in mind a long peaceful co-existence that continue to exist?between the two countries,? reads part of the petition.

The grouping also asked the two Presidents?to desist from any act of provocation and unnecessary political hypocrisy to ruin the ongoing peaceful process.

?We urge?the two leaders??to vest trust and confidence in the integrity of the on-going mediation process and believe that the matter would be handled with professionalism and objectivity.

?It must be clearly stated that any attempt to dismiss or frustrate the dialogue and mediation processes sends unnecessary message of a growing conflict and indeed speculation of war among the citizens of the two countries,? they said.

In its submission to the Southern African Development Community?s Forum of Former African Heads of State Malawi said the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) or legal instruments addressing trans-boundary watercourses are invalid arguing that the Anglo ?German treaty of 1890 on which most borders in Africa are based has the overall authority.

Malawi also questioned the legitimacy of the 1890 treaty could have grave consequences for regional stability saying even countries such as Kenya and Tanzania, DRC and Tanzania, Tanzania and Zambia, Ivory Coast and Togo and boundaries in the Lake Chad are based on the same treaty.

Malawi made its official submission in January 2013 in the Mozambican Capital Maputo to the African Forum for Former Heads of State and Governments, which Former Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano heads and is tasked with the mediation process on the Malawi/Tanzania Lake Border row.

While Tanzania submitted its official submission in February 2013 and reiterated that, it will not go to war with its neighbor Malawi over the much publicized and controversial lake border row saying it is pleased with the mediation process.

Source: http://www.nyasatimes.com/2013/06/20/lake-low-youths-pen-tanzania-malawi-presidents-to-desist-from-political-hypocrisy/

ron white ron white buckyballs buckyballs awake mario batali lone ranger

Samsung Galaxy NX mirrorless camera: hands-on with an Android ILC

Samsung Galaxy NX camera handson

After last year's Galaxy Camera, Samsung split in two directions. It went closer to the phone with the Galaxy S 4 Zoom, shrinking the form factor (and some of the specs) for something that closer approximates a pocket-friendly device, and it got serious about interchangeable-lens cameras. This is the Galaxy NX, an ILC with LTE connectivity that's capable of capturing at 8.6 fps and contains a hybrid autofocus system made by Samsung. In fact, the company says it's behind every part of this new device, from the quad-core 1.6GHz Pega-Q processor, to the 4.8-inch LCD screen, to even the shutter mechanism. With a "DSLR-class" 20.3-megapixel APS-C CMOS image sensor we've seen on other NX cameras, new DRIMe IV image processor and ISO settings from 100 to 25,600, Samsung appears to be making a serious pitch for photographers interested in more than just an Instagram hook-up. This mirrorless shooter will be compatible with the full gamut of NX lenses, currently totaling 13. We paired the Galaxy NX with its 18-55mm OIS kit lens and tested it out for a bit. Read up on our impressions after the break.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/20/samsung-galaxy-nx-camera-hands-on/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

hawaii weather the jerk lake havasu halo 4 jewel san francisco earthquake san francisco earthquake

Friday, May 3, 2013

Obama to pitch immigration overhaul in Mexico

FILE - In this April 30, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama answers questions during his new conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington. The president aims to assure Latin America that the U.S. is serious about immigration reform when he travels to Mexico and Costa Rica, beginning Thursday. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

FILE - In this April 30, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama answers questions during his new conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington. The president aims to assure Latin America that the U.S. is serious about immigration reform when he travels to Mexico and Costa Rica, beginning Thursday. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama has his domestic ambition at the top of his travel agenda as he travels to Mexico on Thursday. To sell his immigration overhaul back home, he needs a growing economy in Mexico and a Mexican president willing to help him secure the border.

Obama was to fly to Mexico City on Thursday to meet with President Enrique Pena Nieto, eager to promote Mexico's economic success and the neighboring country's place as the second largest export market for U.S. goods and services. Mexicans will be hanging on the president's words, but Obama also has in mind an important audience back in the United States.

Though the role played by Latino voters in last year's U.S. presidential election gets much credit for the current momentum for changing immigration laws and providing a path to citizenship for 11 million immigrants in the U.S. illegally, another reason for the change in attitudes is that stronger border protections and the recession have been disincentives to cross into the U.S. As a result, illegal immigration has declined.

"With Mexico, first and foremost, they are critical to our ability to secure the border," said Ben Rhodes, an Obama deputy national security adviser. "All the immigration plans that have been contemplated put a focus on securing the border as an essential priority and starting point for immigration reform."

Even better than a strong border is an economy that keeps people from fleeing.

"If the Mexican economy is growing, it forestalls the need for people to migrate to the United States to find work," Rhodes added.

Eager to focus on the economy and immigration, the administration is downplaying Pena Nieto's recent steps to end the broad access Mexico gave U.S. security agencies to help fight drug trafficking and organized crime under his predecessor, Felipe Calderon. Still, the changes are likely to be a subject during the two leaders' private talks. Obama said this week he wouldn't judge the new moves until he heard directly from Mexican officials.

Pena Nieto took office in December, and for Obama the trip is an opportunity to take his measure of the Mexican leader early in his tenure.

"It's really important to go there while this new president is forming his own plans and judgments about what he's going to do about the border, about where he's going to be on immigration, about where he is on trade," U.S. Chamber of Commerce President/CEO Thomas Donohue said in an interview.

The chamber long has worked to improve U.S.-Mexico trade, noting that now about 6 million U.S. jobs depend on commerce with Mexico.

Striking the right note on border security is key, Donohue said, because it is a central to winning support in Congress for the rest of the immigration legislation.

"That's what everybody wants to hear, and we have to do that in a way that makes these guys down there feel like we're doing it in conjunction with them and for them, so we can do this thing on immigration well, so we can expand our trade, so we can deal with our political issues as they are trying to deal with theirs," Donohue said.

Still, with 33 million U.S. residents of Mexican origin, Obama's message in Mexico is also bound to resonate in the U.S., where Latinos could increase pressure on Congress to act.

"It helps keep these passions alive as far as an issue to promote for the administration," said Carl Meacham, a former senior Latin America adviser on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

But Meacham, now director of the Americas program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, cautioned that despite some bipartisan support to create a path to citizenship in the immigration bill, there is skepticism in Latin America. "They've been brought to the altar so many times by different American administrations that there's a little bit of a lack of trust," he said.

For Pena Nieto, Obama's visit is a chance for him to showcase his country's economic gains. After suffering along with the U.S. during the recession, its economy is now growing at a better clip than that of the U.S. Per capita income has gone from an annual $7,900 two years ago to $10,146. But Diana Negroponte, a Latin America expert at the Brookings Institution, says corruption remains endemic, human rights are still a problem, and efforts to change and improve the judicial system have been too slow.

"There is concern on our side of the border that greater help needs to be given in order for Mexico to reform its system," she said.

Pena Nieto's changes in the security relationship with the U.S. have prompted some U.S. officials to speculate that the new president might be embracing the policies of his Institutional Revolutionary Party, which long has favored centralized political and bureaucratic control.

Among those watching the new steps is Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who has held up $228 million sought by the Obama administration for Mexico under a security cooperation agreement. Under the agreement, known as the Merida Initiative, Congress has already given Mexico more than $1.9 billion in aid since 2008.

But Leahy, chairman of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that oversees the State Department budget, has been a critic of how the money has been used and with the results.

"Congress has been asked for a significant new investment, but it's not clear what the new Mexican government's intensions are," Leahy said in a statement to The Associated Press. "We're in a period of uncertainty until we know enough to be able to reset that part of our relationship. I'm not ready to sign off on more money without a lot more details."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-02-US-Obama/id-42f4b700eee948b2885140c3bc0b1ebc

dodgers triple play baa samoyed kenny powers kenny powers carl hagelin triple play