Posted by on under google maps, kids in mind movie ratings, kids in mind, iphe, youtube, google, minute speed, bit of fun, camp 6, time interest, itouch, geeking, blockbuster, iphone, mobile web, mashup camp, search query, data sources, kiosk, backend |

Mashup Camp winner helps you make wise movie rental decisions
Never rent a bad movie again. I created iMoveMash.com after renting one bad movie too many at the local supermarket's DVD rental kiosk. The free-wifi sign near that kiosk and my long time interest in mobile applications sparked an idea to help movie lovers make better rental decisions.
The resulting mobile web application integrates 7 data sources, including DVDPlay's kiosk content, Blockbuster's latest movies, IMDB movie ratings, Kids-In-Mind movie ratings, YouTube, Yahoo Movies, and Google Maps.
iMovieMash lists the kiosk's or Blockbuster's new movies in descending IMDB movie rating order (best movie first). Each movie I list is also a link to Yahoo Movies and search results from YouTube's API. The YouTube search query is biased in a way that is likely to return trailers or videos related to the movie itself. When clicked, the YouTube results launch the native YouTube application in the iPhone or iTouch.
iMovieMash took 2nd place at Mashup Camp 6, where I demo-ed the application dozens of times in 5 minute "speed geeking" sessions. That was a good bit of fun, and re-enforced the concept that successful products have a simple message, solve a real problem, and look good.
The application was developed with Perl for the backend and the IUI iPhone framework for the front end. It looks best on the iPhone or iTouch, but runs fine on a Blackberry or any web browser. Just goto http://imoviemash.com.
Tagi: google maps, kids in mind movie ratings, kids in mind, iphe, youtube, google, minute speed, bit of fun, camp 6, time interest, itouch, geeking, blockbuster, iphone, mobile web, mashup camp, search query, data sources, kiosk, backend
Posted by on under boing boing, airline entertainment, vanity project, 3d screens, satellite broadcast, giant robots, video demand, broadcast and cable, flipbook, auditoriums, blockbuster, entertainment systems, gimmick, no doubt, mey, punters, filmmaker, adjunct, sound eff |

My latest Guardian column, "Why economics condemns 3D to be no more than a blockbuster gimmick," discusses the difficulty of making truly 3D movies (that is, movies that lose something crucial in 2D) in a world where movies need to find a home on 2D small-screens in order to recoup. Movies, after all, rely on the aftermarket of satellite, broadcast and cable licenses, of home DVD releases and releases to airline entertainment systems and hotel room video-on-demand services - none of which are in 3D. If the movie couldn't be properly enjoyed in boring old 2D, the economics of filmmaking would collapse. So no filmmaker can afford to make a big-budget movie that is intended as a 3D-only experience, except as a vanity project. What's more, no filmmaker can afford to make a small-budget 3D movie, either, because the cinema-owners who've shelled out big money to retrofit their auditoriums for 3D projection don't want to tie up their small supply of 3D screens with art-house movies. They especially don't want to do this when there's plenty of competition from giant-budget 3D movies that add in the 3D as an optional adjunct, a marketing gimmick that can be used to draw in a few more punters during the cinematic exhibition window. I have no doubt that there are brilliant 3D movies lurking in potentia out there in the breasts of filmmakers, yearning to burst free. But I strongly doubt that any of them will burst free. The economics just don't support it: a truly 3D movie would be one where the 3D was so integral to the storytelling and the visuals and the experience that seeing it in 2D would be like seeing a giant-robots-throwing-buildings-at-each-other blockbuster as a flipbook while a hyperactive eight-year-old supplied the sound effects by shouting "BANG!" and "CRASH!" in your ear. Why economics condemns 3D to be no more than a blockbuster gimmick...

Tagi: boing boing, airline entertainment, vanity project, 3d screens, satellite broadcast, giant robots, video demand, broadcast and cable, flipbook, auditoriums, blockbuster, entertainment systems, gimmick, no doubt, mey, punters, filmmaker, adjunct, sound eff
Posted by on under artificial enhancements, false breasts, pirates of the caribbean, dney, molls, lassies, blockbuster, predecessors, beauties, purse, actresses |

IF the predatory molls and purse-snatching lassies in the next Pirates of the Caribbean blockbuster seem a little deflated compared with their swashbuckling predecessors, blame it on Walt Disney’s new ban on actresses with artificial enhancements.



Tagi: artificial enhancements, false breasts, pirates of the caribbean, dney, molls, lassies, blockbuster, predecessors, beauties, purse, actresses
Posted by on under digg, blockbuster, living room, parenting |

Parenting is a lot like the latest Blockbuster: you know you should be enjoying it, but secretly you're glad when it's over.



Tagi: digg, blockbuster, living room, parenting
Posted by on under computer library center, public libraries, line computer, netflix, redbox, local library, raquo, blockbuster |

Apparently, your local library is the biggest DVD rental store in the US. According to a survey released by the Online Computer Library Center, US public libraries lend an average 2.1 million movies/day. That's more than Netflix, Redbox and Blockbuster.
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Tagi: computer library center, public libraries, line computer, netflix, redbox, local library, raquo, blockbuster