Editorial Product Review: :This kid-friendly disc serves as an advance for the DVD release of Disney's Treasure Planet feature, while emphasizing the story's roots in the written word. The main attraction is the movie's story, which can be read aloud in five different languages while viewers watch successive, still images from the original animated film. Sound strange? Sure, but the process is engrossing for children--a natural audience for storytelling. Also on board is a multilingual vocabulary experience, in which you can hear words associated with Treasure Planet's ...
Editorial Product Review: :Eighty great minutes of classic Looney Tunes with a sci-fi theme. While most of the toons deal with Marvin the Martian (featured prominently on the video cover), the collection includes lesser-known shorts such as 'Rocketbye Baby' (a Martian and human baby are switched), 'Space Net' (a Dragnet parody featuring Daffy Duck), and the inspired 'Hyde and Go Tweet' (Tweety Bird turns into a monster). Most of the toons are directed by Chuck Jones, including one of the all-time classics, 'Duck Dodgers in the 24-1/2th ...
Editorial Product Review: :Eighty great minutes of classic Looney Tunes with a sci-fi theme. While most of the toons deal with Marvin the Martian (featured prominently on the video cover), the collection includes lesser-known shorts such as 'Rocketbye Baby' (a Martian and human baby are switched), 'Space Net' (a Dragnet parody featuring Daffy Duck), and the inspired 'Hyde and Go Tweet' (Tweety Bird turns into a monster). Most of the toons are directed by Chuck Jones, including one of the all-time classics, 'Duck Dodgers in the 24-1/2th ...
Editorial Product Review: :Far from the masterful treatment that groundbreaking animator Ralph Bakshi gave the similarly themed The Lord of the Rings just a year later, Wizards feels amateurish. A simplistic distillation of fantasy tropes, the scenario is millions of years after nuclear war wipes out civilization. Middle Earth fairies, elves, and magic emerge from the 'good lands,' while dimwitted mutants with poor comic timing emerge from the nuclear wastes. In the ultimate confrontation between good and evil, a hippie-ish wizard named Avatar defends his utopia against ...
Editorial Product Review: :As long as there is a need for adolescent male sexual fantasy, there will be an audience for Heavy Metal. Released in 1981 and based on stories from the graphic magazine of the same name (possibly the greatest publication to simultaneously provoke imagination and masturbation), the film has since become the most popular single title in Columbia/TriStar's entire film library. That's an amazing fact considering just how silly and senseless the movie really is--an aimless, juvenile amalgam of disjointed stories and clashing visual styles, ...
Editorial Product Review: :The X-Men find themselves battling the most menacing Mutant of all time when they tangle with Professor Xavier's ex-pal, Magneto. But even as Rogue and Cyclops have an eye-opening brush with Magento's lethal powers, Wolverine locks claws with his old nemesis: the prehistorically powerful Mutant, Sabertooth!
Editorial Product Review: :Senator Kelly, the man whose assassination would cause the rise of the Sentinels and the termination of the X-Men, falls prey to both Magneto and a cadre of Sentinels. The X-Men's only hope to avert their terrible destiny is to rescue Kelly from the mechanical menace of the Supreme Sentinel - Mastermold.
Editorial Product Review: :Blaming the steel-skinned Collosus for their school's destruction, Rogue, Storm and Jubillee take on the Russian Mutant while Wolverine battles the guilty Juggernaut. Even with Colossus's help, how can the X-Men hope to stop the unstoppable??!! And worse, Juggernaut turns out to be the missing Professor X's own step-brother.
Sales of semiconductors in November indicate that consumer products such as LCD (liquid crystal display) TVs, digital music players, and other devices sold well during the holidays, the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) said Monday.
November chip sales rose 2.3 percent year-on-year to $23.1 billion, the SIA said.
Unit demand has far outpaced last year. But falling chip prices have hurt industry revenue, the chip association said. For example, DRAM (dynamic RAM) bit shipments grew 25 percent in the three months through mid-December, but average selling prices have declined 20 percent over the same period.
The association also noted that rising energy prices and concerns about the sub-prime lending issue in the U.S. do not appear to have had a significant impact on consumer spending for the holidays, the SIA said. The group reiterated its forecast that worldwide semiconductor sales will reach a new record in 2007. But it will take a stronger than expected December selling season to reach the 3.8 percent growth goal the group had forecast earlier this year, the SIA said.
Investment banking firm Credit Suisse was not as optimistic as the SIA.
The November data was below normal seasonal trends, noted analyst John Pitzer, in a report on Monday. Even if December reaches its normal seasonal growth, 2007 industry revenue will only reach $255.7 billion, up 3.2 percent over last year. The growth percentage would fall short of the SIA's 3.8 percent target.
The slow November prompted Credit Suisse to lower its 2008 chip industry revenue forecast to 9.4 percent year-on-year growth, down from a previous target of 13 percent.
Editor Annalee Newitz reveals the inspiration for the futurism-focused site's name, shares her obsession with the scientifically taboo and tells why sci-fi is going mainstream.