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July 21, 2017

Access to ‘Pokemon Go’ Pokestops could be protected by the First Amendment

A district judge has issued a temporary injunction against ordinance that required augmented reality app developers to apply for a permit in order for players to use their software in public parks.

The post Access to ‘Pokemon Go’ Pokestops could be protected by the First Amendment appeared first on Digital Trends.

Source: Digital Trends VR

July 21, 2017

Google tests confirm VR-based employee training trumps video guides

How-to videos could one day become a thing of the past, as Google has discovered that training someone in virtual reality helps employees learn faster and more effectively than just watching videos.

The post Google tests confirm VR-based employee training trumps video guides appeared first on Digital Trends.

Source: Digital Trends VR

July 21, 2017

The Daily Chord Weekly Recap – Friday, July 21

Sexism in the realm of pop stardom and in the realm of country radio were subjects of stories linked in the Daily Chord this week. Chester Bennington’s death and accusations of crimes by R. Kelly made headlines. For the latest music news and the best music analysis, keep reading and clicking on the Daily Chord. Subscribe to our email blast and bring the news to your inbox.


Monday, July 17


Tuesday, July 18


Wednesday, July 19


Thursday, July 20


Friday, July 21

The post The Daily Chord Weekly Recap – Friday, July 21 appeared first on SXSW.

Source: SxSW Music

July 21, 2017

Watch: ‘Requiem for a Dream’ Shows How Audacious Editing Can Drive a Story


Film editors usually take pains to make their work unobtrusive, but Requiem for a Dream’s cutting style breaks the rules for a good reason.


Requiem for a Dream, Darren Aronofsky’s 2000 adaptation of Hubert Selby’s Jr. novel, is a film so unrelentingly grim that, though it is widely admired, I don’t know many people who’ve sat through it more than once. The film captures the momentum of addiction in a cinematic way, through color, angle, and, more than anything, a cutting style that depicts the sensations of momentum, the subjective grip of addiction so vividly that it instantly became iconic (Last year, we wrote about a parody video that shoehorned the manic cutting onto other classic films.)




The typical 90-minute film averages between 600 to 700 cuts, whereas Requiem contains roughly 2,000 discreet edits.




In this essay, Mr Nerdista shows how Requiem’s editing is its “beating heart,” the key to its ferocity, and the reason that it’s still difficult to watch.



Read More

Source: NoFilmSchool

July 21, 2017

5 spectacular new VR experiences you absolutely must try

We attended a VR event in London where developers and studios showed off exciting new VR projects, and just had to share the best ones with you, so you can try them out on your own VR headset.

The post 5 spectacular new VR experiences you absolutely must try appeared first on Digital Trends.

Source: Digital Trends VR

July 21, 2017

Interaction Design & UI/UX: Pay App Concept and Prototype

Interaction Design & UI/UX: Pay App Concept and Prototype

We would like to share a simple and yet great enough interaction design and UI/UX of an Pay App Concept and featuring a prototype using Framer. Designed by Seoul-based Jaewoong You, what’s interesting here is the language. Instead of having expressed a standard english, I think what is shown here is Korean. I also liked the use of button as toggle to trigger different cards and options.

Jaewoong You is a UI/UX designer based in Seoul, Korea. There isn’t much more information about Jaewoong but I would suggest to follow his work on Behance.

Photo Gallery

Interaction Design & UI/UX: Pay App Concept and PrototypeInteraction Design & UI/UX: Pay App Concept and Prototype

 

More Links

AoiroStudio
Jul 21, 2017

Source: Abduzeedo UI/UX

July 20, 2017

A Conversation with Rachael Ray at the 2017 SXSW Conference [Video]

“I like working in food because like working in music, it’s something that people are never tired of . . . you may never be rich but you’ll always be employed.” – Rachael Ray

Television host and bestselling author Rachael Ray joined us for a conversation with journalist Gary Graff at the 2017 SXSW Conference. Rachael Ray’s career includes hosting multiple Food Network shows, a long-running lifestyle talk show The Rachael Ray Show, and is the author of many cookbooks. Gary Graff is a music journalist who has regularly contributed to many publications including Billboard and The New York Times.

Ray’s preference for practical food preparation through her “30-minute meals” illustrates that a passion for great food should not come at the expense of the other important parts of life: family, friends, entertainment, etc. She is a strong advocate for the music she loves, and hosted her tenth annual Feedback event during SXSW 2017. Feedback is an event that brings together Ray’s love for food, music, and Austin. In it’s ten-year run, Feedback has provided a stage for 150+ artists.

“If you’re a great musician you’ll always find a way to make your music, and if you’re a good cook you’ll always find a job, and you’ll always have a date.”

The conversation at SXSW focuses on her love of music and how it integrates into other parts of her work and personal life. Aspiring artists and professionals watching the session can learn from the way Ray exudes personality and charm in spite of such a busy professional life. For those more interested in her work as a chef, the extended Q&A at the end of the session includes many audience questions about her cooking ethos, and a lesson for all thrifty artists on how to modify a ramen diet to be healthier.

Watch the video above for the full 2017 SXSW Conference Session with Rachael Ray. Get inspired by a multitude of diverse visionaries at SXSW – browse more 2017 Keynotes, Featured Sessions, Red Carpets, and Q&A’s on our YouTube Channel.

Learn More About SXSW 2018

Interested in performing in SXSW 2018? Learn about the Showcase Applications process. Mark your calendars for Tuesday, August 1 when registration, housing, and press accreditation opens for the 2018 SXSW season. We hope to see you in March!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and SXSW News for the latest SXSW coverage, announcements, application tips, and updates.

“A Conversation with Rachael Ray” 2017 SXSW Conference Session – Photo by Amanda Stronza

The post A Conversation with Rachael Ray at the 2017 SXSW Conference [Video] appeared first on SXSW.

Source: SxSW Music

July 20, 2017

Chanelle Aponte Pearson’s Dazzling Ode to Black Lesbian Love Is the Next Great Queer Project of 2017

If the success of “Moonlight” and “Atlanta” are any indication, 2017 is set to become the year of the visionary black auteur (about time already). Joining their ranks soon enough is Chanelle Aponte Pearson, director of ‘195 Lewis,” which recently won a Special Mention from Outfest for “highlighting the contemporary life of queer black woman with flair, vibrancy and substance.”

The short series explores the joys and pitfalls of open relationships in a vibrant community of black queer women living in Bed Stuy, Brooklyn. Flowing with original music by members of the community and glowing with luscious colors and warm light, Pearson breathes life into the eclectic mix of characters with equal parts humor and lust. The script, by first-time screenwriters Rae Leone Allen and Yaani Supreme, radiates a confident originality that heralds a fresh new perspective.

Allen and Supreme originally approached filmmaker Terence Nance with a treatment for the series, hoping the director of the 2012 Sundance film “An Oversimplification of Her Beauty” might like the project. He did, but he liked it for Pearson, a producer on “Oversimplification” and operations manager at Nance’s production company, MVMT.

A still from “195 Lewis”

Screenshot

“Terence saw the brief description of the show, and immediately thought, ‘Chanelle — you need to do it,” Pearson told IndieWire. “Terence is really good at encouraging folks to take it beyond the idea stage. We’ve been friends and partners for a long time and he has always been super supportive.”

When Pearson met up with Supreme, the two immediately hit it off. “We talked for hours about queerness in Brooklyn, and poly-ness in Brooklyn and how we’re not seeing that,” recalled Pearson. “We were really excited to create a project reflective of the experiences we were observing in our community.”

For Allen, the impetus to make the series was similar. “Yanni and I both moved to New York around the same time, and we were just blown away by the scene of all the black queer women in Brooklyn,” she said.

She describes an experience every queer woman can identify with: Re-visiting “The L Word” and noticing all the ways the groundbreaking lesbian show (which ended in 2009 and may return soon) feels outdated. “We were like — our lives are so much better than this.”

For the first time since leaving their respective Dallas and Washington D.C. homes, Allen and Supreme found themselves surrounded by a dizzying variety of queer women of color. “All the women had natural hair and Masters degrees. I think it’s a Brooklyn thing,” said Allen. Part of the magic of “195 Lewis” lies in the representation given a community that rarely sees its own stories told — much less one created by its own.

“There are so many images of the opposite of us — black people that are underserved, marginalized, having issues. All that stuff is real, but I think there is a big vacuum around the beauty of our lives. I feel like, it’s almost a service to overdo that. Because there’s so little of it in cinema,” said Allen.

With so much at stake, the team fretted over every single detail, down to each character’s hair. “Even something like, ‘should this character have an afro or should she have a blowout?’” recalled Pearson. “I specifically remember an argument that was — ‘No, Jamila has a blowout, that’s a part of who she is.’”

Of the many comic touches in “195 Lewis,” the often dense philosophical reasoning the characters use to manage the stress of multiple booty calls is its most singular juxtaposition. “A lot of the lines are verbatim from our lives,” said Allen. “Black women are the smartest beings on the planet. They’re the original beings. It’s odd to me when people are taken aback by it. I’m like — ‘Where do you hang out? Who do you talk to?’”

A still from “195 Lewis”

Courtesy Outfest/Screenshot

Pearson modestly attributes the show’s quality to the crew — which she estimates was 90 percent queer women of color. In true indie film form, many of the PAs and grips had little to no experience. Ryann Holmes, founding member of the black and trans collective Bklyn Boihood, stepped in as music supervisor to give the show its electrifying soundtrack.

“I think that’s reflective of the community. Sometimes we’re shut out of a lot of institutions or spaces, so we have to create the opportunities for ourselves to make the work that we want,” Pearson said.

Pearson has received a few industry boosts that will aid the transition from producing to directing: In 2015, she won the Gotham Awards’ Spotlight on Women Filmmakers Live The Dream grant, and she was a fellow with IFP’s Screen Forward Lab. With all the buzz surrounding the project, there is no doubt there are many more accolades coming her way.

“195 Lewis” played Outfest Los Angeles on July 14.

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Source: IndieWire Digital TV

July 20, 2017

Lenovo’s new DaystAR headset looks a lot like Microsoft’s HoloLens

Lenovo is making a big play for a spot at the augmented reality table, showing off a new headset dubbed the daystAR and detailing a set of tools to help developers create quality content.

The post Lenovo's new DaystAR headset looks a lot like Microsoft's HoloLens appeared first on Digital Trends.

Source: Digital Trends VR

July 19, 2017

A Conversation With Frank Oz and Leonard Maltin at the 2017 SXSW Conference [Video]

“When I came to New York, I had done marionettes for many years and I had only done a few hand puppets. I sat in front of a mirror for months practicing lip synch that Jane Henson taught me, but I didn’t do voices for four years. I didn’t think enough of myself, I had low self-esteem still and I didn’t think I could do it and Jim was about to give up on me, until one day we did a tv show, and he [Jim] forced me to do a character. He forced me and from that point on I started learning, ” — SXSW Featured Speaker, Frank Oz.

Oz is a four-time Emmy winner, a performer with The Muppets, and voiced the part of Yoda in the Star Wars films. He also directed over a dozen films including Little Shop of Horrors and The Score. This year, Oz brought Muppet Guys Talking – Secrets Behind the Show the Whole World Watched to the SXSW Film Festival where, for the first time ever, five of the original Muppet performers came together to discuss the creation of their iconic characters under the visionary leadership of Jim Henson.

Leonard Maltin, one of the world’s most respected film critics and historians, joined Oz for the SXSW Conference Featured Session. He is best known for his widely-used reference work Leonard Maltin’s Movie Guide and its companion volume Leonard Maltin’s Classic Movie Guide.

Enjoy this candid conversation about Oz’s illustrious career featuring stories from how he got started in puppetry to his humble beginnings as a filmmaker.

Learn More About SXSW 2018

Learn how to successfully enter your film to the 2018 SXSW Film Festival with our How to Submit Your Film video and find out more information about deadlines and fees here.

Mark your calendars for Tuesday, August 1 when registration, housing, and press accreditation opens for the 2018 SXSW season. We hope to see you in March!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and SXSW News for the latest SXSW coverage, announcements, application tips, and updates.

Photo by Hubert Vestil/Getty Images for SXSW

The post A Conversation With Frank Oz and Leonard Maltin at the 2017 SXSW Conference [Video] appeared first on SXSW.

Source: SxSW Film