A music video by puppeteer and special effects artist Matt Ficner. RT: 4 minutes. Via Zombie Monkey Projects
John Farrier's Blog Posts
What would Star Trek: The Next Generation be like if the Enterprise was an interstellar cruise ship? RT: 1 min, 35 sec.
Update 9/4/08 by Alex - original link [MySpace video] - Thanks Charley!
Hot or not? An Italian priest invites readers to decide:
An Italian priest says he is organising the world's first beauty pageant for nuns to erase a stereotype of them as being old and dour.
Antonio Rungi says The Miss Sister Italy online contest will start on his blog in September.
"Nuns are above all women and beauty is a gift from God," he told Italy's Corriere della Sera newspaper.
Honesty is a series of short films taking place in a world where people say exactly what they think. Pretty funny stuff. The one above takes place at a funeral. Link to the whole series
It's a diamond mine in Mirna, Siberia. It measures 525 m deep and 1.25 km in diameter. The suction from the hole is so powerful that helicopters flying over it have crashed. Link via Absolute Moral Authority
[Video Link] A spooky short film about an over-caffeinated driver who finds himself in an alternate reality after a body crashes through his windshield. Directed by John Knautz and starring Trevor Matthews. 9 minutes, 3 seconds long.
Many role-playing games, since the early days of Dungeons & Dragons, have employed alignment systems to keep a player's decisions for his character consistent with some ethical framework. This way, a player is not free to have a normally moral character commit heinous acts because it would be temporarily convenient and lack any real-world consequences.
Dungeons & Dragons' alignment system is based on two axes of lawfulness and goodness. Palladium games more or less adapt this system to include selfishness. Other, more narrative-driven systems, such as The World of Darkness, round out a character's attitudes more loosely. And some RPGs have no alignment system at all and leave ethical issues to be freely played out.
What is your favorite alignment system?
Photo by Flickr user laenulfean used under Creative Commons license
Dungeons & Dragons' alignment system is based on two axes of lawfulness and goodness. Palladium games more or less adapt this system to include selfishness. Other, more narrative-driven systems, such as The World of Darkness, round out a character's attitudes more loosely. And some RPGs have no alignment system at all and leave ethical issues to be freely played out.
What is your favorite alignment system?
Photo by Flickr user laenulfean used under Creative Commons license
Tim of Pop Crunch has a list of what he considers to be the best dystopian novels of all time. Among his choices are The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood and Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell. Some of his choices I would class as "post-apocalyptic", rather than dystopian. I think that the latter genre is best defined as set within a tyrannical regime. Nonetheless, the list makes for some interesting reading suggestions.
What is your favorite work of dystopian fiction?
Link via Digg
What is your favorite work of dystopian fiction?
Link via Digg
It's still a couple hours until lunchtime, but I'm hungry! Let's see what cuisine science fiction can offer us.
Star Trek -- a jumja stick. This Bajoran desert is made from the sap of the jumja tree. It's sort of like carmelized apple, except without the apple, or the creamy taste of carmel. Think of it as a dried popsicle.
Star Wars -- human. This Ewok delicacy can be served in a variety of ways, but gourmands prefer to have it roasted over an open fire. Tastes like chicken and pairs well with a dry chardonnay.
Babylon 5 -- spoo. Though physically repugnant while alive, the spoo makes for a quite tasty meat dish. Centauri prefer theirs cubed and aged, whereas the Narn (to the disgust of the Centauri), perfer fresh spoo.
Stargate -- kassa. Sometimes called the "evil Orville Redenbacher", this corn-like product is genetically engineered to be very addictive. That disadvantage aside, it's unbelievably awesomely good. I mean, I can't stop eating it.
What's your favorite food from science fiction?
Star Trek -- a jumja stick. This Bajoran desert is made from the sap of the jumja tree. It's sort of like carmelized apple, except without the apple, or the creamy taste of carmel. Think of it as a dried popsicle.
Star Wars -- human. This Ewok delicacy can be served in a variety of ways, but gourmands prefer to have it roasted over an open fire. Tastes like chicken and pairs well with a dry chardonnay.
Babylon 5 -- spoo. Though physically repugnant while alive, the spoo makes for a quite tasty meat dish. Centauri prefer theirs cubed and aged, whereas the Narn (to the disgust of the Centauri), perfer fresh spoo.
Stargate -- kassa. Sometimes called the "evil Orville Redenbacher", this corn-like product is genetically engineered to be very addictive. That disadvantage aside, it's unbelievably awesomely good. I mean, I can't stop eating it.
What's your favorite food from science fiction?
Every year since 2007, artists have been invited to submit variations on a 1:1 model of Darth Vader's helmet. This year, the show begins on June 11 in Los Angeles. You can view more examples at the link.
Link via technabob | Official Website | Image: Vader Project
Email This Post to a Friend