The trailer for this new movie is very intriguing. No release dates yet, it seems.
A young student uses his phonecam to shoot interviews with the staff of a New York fashion house, and posts them online without the interviewees’ knowledge or consent. A runway accident turns into a murder investigation, then, “denial leads to devastation.”
IMDB, NYT piece, Flickr set of stills
Via BoingBoing
Posted by stb at 11:14 on September 19th, 2009.
Categories: Entertainment. Tags: funny, movie, trailer.

Hedy Lamarr in The Conspirators
Hollywood actress Hedy Lamarr, well known for Boom Town and My Favorite Spy, co-invented frequency hopping to help make radio controlled torpedoes more resilient:
At a party in Hollywood, Lamarr met George Antheil, an avant-garde composer who also wrote film scores. While playing the piano with the composer, the actress suddenly has an important idea for her torpedo control system. Antheil sets up the system on 88 frequencies, as this number corresponds to the number of keys on a piano. To construct it, he employs something similar to the player piano sheet music that he used in his Ballet Mécanique.
In December 1940, the frequency-switching device developed by Lamarr and Antheil was sent to the National Inventors’ Council. A patent was awarded on August 11, 1942. The two inventors leave it to the American military to figure out how to use the device. Lamarr’s and Antheil’s Secret Communication System disappears into the U.S. Army’s filing cabinets.
Art Fag City via BoingBoing
Posted by stb at 23:46 on August 11th, 2009.
Categories: Old technology, people. Tags: inventor, movie, radio, spread spectrum.