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More than 25,000 video games, and counting
Henry Lowood, curator for the history of science and technology collections at Stanford University libraries, is in charge of a major project involving the archiving of 25,000-plus video games. Hear how the project started and where it goes from here. CNET News.com's Miriam Olsson reports.
The brief, brief from the band for this song was "lapdancers" which became a man obsessed with a lap dancer. Just so long as it involved the band and a lapdancing club. So we came up with the idea of a man so consumed with rage that it ultimately becomes his salvation..and er..some lapdancers. The shoot began in a nite club in Margate, Kent, co-owned by one of the bands brothers, however the nitemare began a few hours earlier, when at 4pm our lead actress had to pull out leaving us four hours to find a replacement who would be prepared to come to Margate and pole dance in front of a bunch of strangers all night for free. Further more our first A.D was on a shoot and over running. Many frantic calls and emails later the planets aligned and we found Joceline, an actress and model, who as luck would have it lived moments away from the studio where our first A.D had just wrapped. So off we all convoyed down to the coast. We arrived at the nite club at 11 to start shooting at midnight only to find out that it closed at 2am. The sunrise was at 4am so this left us two hours to shoot. We threw half the storyboard in the sea. The club cleared an area upstairs so we could shoot close ups of the dancers, meanwhile our extras got stuck into the free bar. Unfortunately our extras idea of smart dress wasn't quite the same as ours, so we wrangled the four guys who did wear suits into the front of every shot. The bar was cleared by 2.30am and we were done by 5am following some sneeky lighting miracles to cheat the threat of impending daylight that was creeping through the windows. More information is available at www.visualabuse.com
From the floor of SID: Check out LG.Philips' 100-inch HD LCD display; Sharp's Two-way angle-viewing LCD that shows a different image from a different angle; and Planar's Stereo/3D Monitor. CNET News.com's Vincent Tremblay reports.
Crave discovers two different ways that you can drive around in a tub, and one involves a Mini Cooper limousine.
From Yahoo to pretexting--what's up?
This week there was a major shuffle at the top and in the structure of Yahoo. What does this mean? Where is this company headed? We talk with CNET News.com's Elinor Mills and Jim Kerstetter. Meanwhile, the U.S. Senate may move against pretexting. This follows Hewlett-Packard's civil settlement with the California Attorney General's Office involving the use of pretexting that targeted reporters, board members and employees. News.com's Declan McCullagh sorts through this issue.
This is a hilarious real news segment taken by KRON 4 in San Francisco of the whistle tips craze that happened in Oakland. Whistle tips are driving some people crazy, but not Bubb Rubb and Lil Sis. "Woo woo!"
While in postwar Berlin to cover the Potsdam Conference, an American military journalist becomes drawn into a murder investigation that involves his former mistress and his driver.
TVU Networks answers copyright questions
CNET News.com reporter Greg Sandoval speaks with TVU Networks CEO Paul Shen about the company's peer-to-peer software, which enables people to stream live TV broadcasts on to the Web without any authorization and involves file-sharing--a word that always gives entertainment executives pause. \r\n
This video portrays a spiritual awakening in ones' life likened to Rip Van Winkle. filmed on Redington Beach on the Gulf of Mexico in Florida.
Microsoft portrays its new search engine as the savior of the universe. But Buzz knows better: our savior is the Pre!
