Scientists Made an Unbreakable Smartphone Screen From Clear Electrodes

The truly shatterproof screen is a little bit like the flying car : It’s been promised for years, but never arrives. Scientists at University of Akron claim they’ve cracked the code, so to speak, by creating a super-tough screen out of transparent electrodes. Read more…

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Scientists Made an Unbreakable Smartphone Screen From Clear Electrodes

Hitler materializes in lost family trip photos found at thrift store

Mat Ames found some negatives in a thrift store in Roanoke, Virginia. After digitizing them, a lot of the photos seemed to belong to a couple’s vacation in Naples, Italy, in 1938. Among all the scenic Italian vignettes there was a creepy surprise—a sinister figure sitting in a car under the sun. It was Adolf Hitler. Read more…

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Hitler materializes in lost family trip photos found at thrift store

New French Law Prohibits After-Hours Work Emails

Hugh Pickens DOT Com (2995471) writes “Lucy Mangan reports at The Guardian that a new labor agreement in France means that employees must ignore their bosses’ work emails once they are out of the office and relaxing at home – even on their smartphones. Under the deal, which affects a million employees in the technology and consultancy sectors (including the French arms of Google, Facebook, and Deloitte), employees will also have to resist the temptation to look at work-related material on their computers or smartphones – or any other kind of malevolent intrusion into the time they have been nationally mandated to spend on whatever the French call la dolce vita. “We must also measure digital working time, ” says Michel De La Force, chairman of the General Confederation of Managers. “We can admit extra work in exceptional circumstances but we must always come back to what is normal, which is to unplug, to stop being permanently at work.” However critics say it will impose further red tape on French businesses, which already face some of the world’s tightest labor laws.” (Continues) Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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New French Law Prohibits After-Hours Work Emails

Audience Jeers Contestant Who Uses Game Theory To Win At ‘Jeopardy’

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes “USA Today reports that Arthur Chu, an insurance compliance analyst and aspiring actor, has won $102, 800 in four Jeopardy! appearances using a strategy — jumping around the board instead of running categories straight down, betting odd amounts on Daily Doubles and doing a final wager to tie — that has fans calling him a ‘villain’ and ‘smug.’ Arthur’s in-game strategy of searching for the Daily Double that has made him such a target. Typically, contestants choose a single category and progressively move from the lowest amount up to the highest, giving viewers an easy-to-understand escalation of difficulty. But Arthur has his sights solely set on finding those hidden Daily Doubles, which are usually located on the three highest-paying rungs in the categories (the category itself is random). That means, rather than building up in difficulty, he begins at the most difficult questions. Once the two most difficult questions have been taken off the board in one column, he quickly jumps to another category. It’s a grating experience for the viewer, who isn’t given enough to time to get in a rhythm or fully comprehend the new subject area. ‘The more unpredictable you are, the more you put your opponents off-balance, the longer you can keep an initial advantage, ‘ says Chu. ‘It greatly increases your chance of winning the game if you can pull it off, and I saw no reason not to do it.’ Another contra-intuitive move Chu has made is playing for a tie rather than to win in ‘Final Jeopardy’ because that allows you advance to the next round which is the most important thing, not the amount of money you win in one game. ‘In terms of influence on the game, Arthur looks like a trendsetter of things to come, ‘ says Eric Levenson. ‘Hopefully that has more to do with his game theory than with his aggressive button-pressing.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Audience Jeers Contestant Who Uses Game Theory To Win At ‘Jeopardy’

Report: Paramount Pictures Cuts Film, Goes All-Digital in U.S.

The Los Angeles Times reports that Paramount Pictures is the first major Hollywood studio to ditch 35mm film and go all-digital for United States theater releases, with The Wolf of Wall Street being shipped to theaters in digital format only. Sorry film fans, it sounds like that’s a wrap. Read more…        

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Report: Paramount Pictures Cuts Film, Goes All-Digital in U.S.

You Can 3D Print Your Very Own Movie Prop From The Hobbit

If you fit into the piece of the Venn diagram between “Fans of The Hobbit, ” “Microsoft Users, ” and “Folks Who Have a 3D Printer, ” Microsoft and Warner Bros. UK have a treat: On December 13th, when the second Hobbit movie debuts, you’ll be able to download plans to 3D print your own souvenir: the Key to Erebor. Read more…        

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You Can 3D Print Your Very Own Movie Prop From The Hobbit

Luc Besson still wants to make another Fifth Element

Fifth Element director Luc Besson doesn’t exactly want to make a sequel to his famous space opera — but another film, in the same vein and with the same ideas. Which he would direct. Read more…        

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Luc Besson still wants to make another Fifth Element

They’re doing a Superman/Batman movie… but that’s not the big news

Man of Steel director Zack Snyder just came out and rocked our worlds at Comic-Con. Not just announcing that Batman will be in the Superman sequel — which he did with a cool-looking metallic Superman-Batman logo that drove the crowd nuts. But that was not the biggest deal. Read more…        

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They’re doing a Superman/Batman movie… but that’s not the big news

You Won’t Believe How Much Netflix Crops Your Movies

Did you know that Netflix is cropping the hell out of movies? I didn’t. But even if you had noticed, it’s unlikely you realize just how bad it gets. A semi-new Tumblr called What Netflix Does has pointed out the extent of the trimming. And it’s atrocious. Read more…        

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You Won’t Believe How Much Netflix Crops Your Movies