Showing posts with label star wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label star wars. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2020

Star Wars Day: May The Force Be With You. "Isolation does not stop fans of the series around the world from celebrating Star Wars Day"

The Empire Strikes Back 1980 Encyclopedia Britannica


May 4 is considered Star Wars Day. Isolation does not stop fans of the series around the world from celebrating.

A fan convention and an online fundraising campaign and series-inspired game updates are just some of the ways franchise fans celebrate isolation in 2020. May 4 is considered Star Wars Day. In 1978, franchise fans invented a pun based on the classic slogan

"May the Force Be With You"

May the Fourth Be With You! "

In 2020, Reedpop, the organization behind this holiday, will mark the event with an online convention.

Star Wars – Yoda May The Force Be With You Poster EuroPosters

The convention "An Online Revelry: May the 4th Be With You and Revenge of the 5th" takes place on May 4 and 5, in collaboration with the Comic Con Festival in New York. The event schedules multiple events, including live streaming of episodes of "Star Wars: The Clone Wars" and "Star Wars: Rebels" on Twitter, as well as question and answer sessions with screenwriters and actors associated with the franchise.

Star Wars: The Clone Wars Returns on Disney StarWars.com


Fans will be able to participate in general culture contests with prizes, with organizers encouraging them to use the hashtags # Maythe4th and # Revengeofthe5th.

Through Four Seasons, Star Wars Rebels Has Been a Storytelling StarWars.com


Latest updates for Star Wars Battlefront 2

The events will take place on ReedPop properties' associated social media accounts, including New York Comic Con, C2E2, BookCon, Emerald City Comic Con and Florida SuperCon

Star Wars Battlefront II Eneba


In 2020, fans have an additional reason to celebrate. The Star Wars Battlefront 2 game receives the latest updates. The latest package of options is called "The Battle on Scarif" and has already been broadcast online.

Battle of Scarif Wookieepedia - Fandom


The celebration began on Sunday with Rebelthon 2020, an online action that aims to raise funds for UNICEF and the fight against Covid-19.

The anniversary is also an opportunity for the Disney Plus platform to gather all the movies in the series and launch a documentary about the newest series dedicated to the Star Wars universe, "The Mandalorian". The second season of the story built around the little hero of the species of Master Yoda is scheduled for October.

Jon Favreau's live-action Star Wars The Verge


In 1978, fans invented a pun based on the classic "Star Wars" slogan "May the Force Be With You": "May the Fourth Be With You". Although fans in the United States initially called the expression Independence Day, July 4, the following year the date was reset to May 4, following the publication of an advertising page in The London Evening News, which contained a congratulatory message. addressed to the first British woman in office as Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, who won the election on May 4, 1979: “May the Fourth Be With You, Maggie. Congratulations! ".


At that time, the movie "Star Wars", released on May 25, 1977, had already won six Oscars, for best music, best sound mix, best visual effects, best costumes, best better decors and best fitting.

In addition, after the release of the movie "Star Wars-Episode III: Revenge of the Sith Lords", the phrase "Revenge of the 5th" appeared, which marks a holiday on May 5, dedicated to the negative characters of the franchise.

May 25, 1977: 'Star Wars' Opens in Theaters The Nation


Created from the imagination of George Lucas, the "Star Wars" franchise marked, in 1977, the birth of a new genre in commercial, popular cinema for the general public. Lucas sold Lucasfilm in 2012 for $ 4.05 billion to Disney studios, which continued the "Star Wars" series with three new films, released in 2015, as well as other derivative productions.

How 'Star Wars' creator George Lucas spends his $6.4 billion Business Insider


The Star Wars franchise has become a veritable cultural phenomenon, and characters such as Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia and Darth Vader and phrases such as "May the force be with you" have entered world popular culture.



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Monday, April 20, 2020

The future is now: 10 ideas from past SF applied in present



SF writers have often succeeded in imagining the technology we use today.

Over the years, SFs, whether we're talking about books, comics, serials or movies here, have managed to show us what the technology we will use in the future might look like. This genre has given birth to many important names in literature, among them, Jules Verne managing to combine an easy-to-read style of writing with a boundless imagination; he managed to foresee even aselenization in his book "From the Earth to the Moon".

The development of radio and television has given many writers and writers the opportunity to share their ideas with the general public and even give us a clear picture of how the technology we use will look. Space has created a list of 10 ideas from SF that, in the meantime, have become reality.


1. Star Trek Mobile Phone: The Original Series

The first mobile phone was invented by Motorola in 1973 and weighed 1.1 kilograms; Over time, scientists have been able to consistently reduce the weight of these devices and, more importantly, increase their number of functions.

H&I | The Star Trek prop that predicted the flip phone is back



If the first mobile phone, Motorola DynaTAC, only gave you 35 minutes for calls, the preset phones can work even for a few days without being charged, and some of them can even download in a few seconds a lot of information that initially mobile telephony would have seemed astronomical.


2. Universal Translator, Star Trek: The Original Series

The characters in Star Trek used a device to communicate with the various alien species. Currently, the idea of a device has been replaced by an algorithm, such as the one offered by Skype that allows the translation of the voice from one language to another. Obviously, the current technology does not meet SF standards, but it alone represents solid steps in the right direction.

Star Trek's Universal Translator Version 1.0 Shelly Palmer
Fans of Star Trek (The Original Series) will fondly remember the “Universal Translator.” While Gene Roddenberry’s epic saga was both inspirational and aspirational for some, it set goals for others. How much wireless bandwidth would you need on the Starship Enterprise? How would a medical tricorder work? What kind of storage would you need on Memory Alpha? How did the noise-cancelling for communicators work? Every engineer I know can tell you a story about how he or she was inspired by this amazing 1960s television show.


3. Teleportation, Star Trek: The Original Series

Quantum teleportation moves into the third dimension – Physics World Physics World


The idea behind the teleportation in this series is that a person could be "decomposed" into energy and "recomposed" once they reach their destination. Unfortunately, our scientists have not been able to teleport people, but they have been able to teleport photons, the smallest forms of matter, on the boundary between energy and matter.

Physicists in China and Austria have shown for the first time they can teleport multi-dimensional states of photons. Carrying out experiments using photons encoded via three spatial states, they say their scheme can be extended to arbitrarily high numbers of dimensions and is a vital step in teleporting the entire quantum state of a particle. The work could also improve technology used in quantum communications and quantum computing.

Quantum mechanics forbids the quantum state of one particle from being copied precisely to another particle. But teleportation – the instantaneous transfer of a state between particles separated by a long distance – offers an alternative. The process involves no physical transfer of matter and erases the state of the particle to be copied.


4. 3D Holograms, Star Wars

In the Star Wars universe, some of the communication is done with the help of three-dimensional holograms, such a transmission being the one that removes Obi-Wan Kenobi from his isolation on the desert planet Tatooine.


In real life, in 2018, researchers at Brigham Young University, United States of America managed to create such a hologram, their technology uses fast particles.


5. Bionic members, Star Wars

Star Wars fans know over the course of the nine films many people lose their limbs; however, the confrontation between Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader of Cloud City gave us the first picture of how an artificial hand could look and function.

Cybernetics Wookieepedia - Fandom

This scenario seems to be closer to reality now than it was in the 1970s when the series was launched; researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology, USA, have managed to produce an arm that can be controlled with the help of sensors by people whose arms have been amputated.


6. Digital panels, Blade Runner

In this movie, viewers can see a possible version of a Los Angees from the not too distant future; on some of the buildings of this city are a series of giant billboards that would be digital. In 2013, the company Digital Out Of Home (DOOH) was created which develops a similar technology.










7. Artificial intelligence

Currently, artificial intelligence has a variety of applications, starting from art and even to medicine and pharmacology; we can say that researchers in most people do their best to adapt the algorithms to help them in their work, and this is due to their almost unlimited potential.

In the movie Blade Runner, we are presented with the idea of synthetic people who need artificial intelligence to function; the existence of these algorithms tends to play an important role in the unfolding of the film.


8. Space Stations, 2001: A Space Odyssey

In the 1968 film, we are presented with the idea of ​​a space station, located on the Earth's low orbit, where astronauts experience microgravity. Starting with 1998, this idea began to take shape and in reality, with the construction of the International Space Station, a laboratory dedicated to microgravity studies.


Washington, DC, April 2, 1968.  The Uptown Theater.  Opening night.  The world eagerly awaits the premiere of Stanley Kubrick’s latest epic film.  Four years in the making with noted science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke, the film has been delayed and is over budget.  Two days later, 2001: A Space Odyssey opens in New York and Los Angeles, and in other US cities the following week.  Anticipation runs high, given the talent involved and the near total secrecy surrounding the film during production and editing, which Kubrick was still finishing just a few days before opening day.  Even Clarke didn’t see the finished product until the premiere.


9. Tablets, 2001: A Space Odyssey

The tablets we use today appeared in 2010, however in 1964, in 2001: A Space Odyssey, the creators introduced the concept of "newspads". These devices were used by the scientists in the movie and, like Samsung, these were the first true tablets and not the iPads.


10. Cars without driver, Total Recall

This 1984 film presents a concept that scientists from a multitude of research institutions and private companies are actively working on: creating an algorithm that allows cars to travel safely, without the need for a driver at steering wheel. NASA seems to be interested in this property, and that would allow it to build more efficient robots that explore space.


The futuristic cars of Total Recall, behind the scenes hemmings.com

























A long time ago (in a galaxy far, far away? No, wrong movie), reader Greg Allen caught our post on the Boonie Bug and sent in some screengrabs from the classic Arnold Schwarzenegger film Total Recall guessing that the Johnnycab was based on a Boonie Bug. It wasn’t, but that post did inspire James Belohovek to get in touch with us. James did some work on the Johnny in the Johnnycab and had a chance to take plenty of pictures on set during the filming of the movie.

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