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Showing posts from October, 2022

Star Trek Notes

  Star Trek Notes Nyota Uhura was revolutionary First interracial kiss in TV The first contact between humans and Vulcans The ship USS Kelvin is immediately under attack by Romulans 223304 They kill the old commander Captain kirk’s wife is having a kid He goes down with the ship Jim is a bad kid and it looks like they have robocops Vulcans are nerds, the kid Spock is half human and Vulcan Grown-up Spock rejects the Vulcan way The movie moves very quick Jim is still arrogant but Starfleet wants him to enlist Weird to see Karl Urban with an American accent because he’s great in The Boys Zoe Saldana being roommates with a green character is ironic This Spock seems to have more personality than the one from 1966 If there isn’t a Russian character in the first one Chechov seems like a waste of a character Spock and Uhura have a relationship contrary to the original where you told us she kissed Kirk Time Travel?! Giant monsters on Delta Bega Runs into Spock from 129 year

The Matrix Debate

My team and I took the side of the red pill during our class debate. Just as the movie explores, both pills and their pros and cons are detailed throughout the plot. The central idea of the red pill is freedom. With great power comes great responsibility, and with greater risk comes greater reward. Freedom from the matrix results in more power for Neo, as Morpheus, Trinity, and other members of the crew had discovered.  However, the foundation of Team Blue Pill's argument against the red pill was built upon already having a happy life inside the matrix, one that was not filled with danger. The matrix had all of the things we know in life today, and that would be enough for them.  One of the biggest flaws I find in this reasoning is that knowing what the other side of reality brings, how could one think that a life inside the matrix is one that is lived to the fullest. Neo still had struggles when he was Thomas Anderson, working a basic office job where he still needed to confide in

The Matrix Notes

Matrix Notes My side: Red Pill   ·      Trinity is super human, she works for/with Morpheus ·      The agents going after her have the same physical abilities ·      They can travel through phone lines ·      Neo is the informant ·      “Follow the white rabbit” ·      Dujour is the white rabbit ·      Neo’s real name is Thomas Anderson and he works at a software company ·      The agents capture him while he is standing on the edge of the building? ·      They know everything about him just as Morpheus and Trinity do ·      The matrix is a disguise of the truth that everyone is a slave ·      Red pill: stay in wonderland and see how far the rabbit hole goes ·      Neo takes the red pill ·      Lots of references to old childrens stories ·      Morpheus runs a physical test, where a mirror consumes him. He wakes up in a vat of gel with tubes attached. Then he falls down and is brought back by a claw, where he ends up in the real world ·      They are rebuilding Neo ·      Cypher nsays

A.I. / Pinocchio Notes

·      Not sure when the movie is set but definitely in the future ·      Giving a robot child life  the first connection to Pinocchio ·      Monica plays once upon a dream and reading a story to her son in a coma ·      Monica doesn’t like the idea of taking in a replacement child in the robot, but can’t get over how real it looks ·      Child is Very obedient ·      Also stares and just watches what Monica is doing ·      Robots not having to eat makes dinner time very awkward ·      David Calls monica “mommy” as she tries to shut him down   ·      Martin gets out of his coma and is living in the house now ·      Teddy use to be Martin’s toy ·      Martin has resentment towards David like any new sibling would ·      They read Pinocchio to him on the boat ·      David is obsessed with the story of Pinocchio ·      Monica can’t bring David to be destroyed but abandons him in the woods ·      Cuts to a completely different story of robot sex workers ·      The crowd is fooled by Davi

Blade Runner Notes

·      Replicants are robots that are identical to humans but are used as slaves ·      Blade Runners are instructed to kill any remaining replicants in “retirements” ·      The replicants seem to have awkward responses, very unsure of themselves in terms of emotion ·      The replicants are designed with different purposes; a select few have come back to earth and are interested in the Tyrell Corp. ·      Replicants only have a 4-year life span ·      “more human than human” ·      The replicants are becoming more advanced ·      J.F. Sebastian ·      The new replicants, like Rachael, are now being implanted with memories ·      Pris (a replicant) runs into JF Sebastian, a genetic creator and toymaker ·      Incredible image enhancement technology ties one of the images to the animal scale found ·      Most real animals are extinct, so now for food they are bioengineered ·      Deckard hunts and kills the snake girl Zhora, one of the mentioned replicants ·      The police want Deckard

Siri & Alexa One Page Paper

     In trying to have a conversation with Siri on my iPhone, I found it to be very difficult. Apple’s virtual assistant has nothing close to the personality that HAL 9000 did in 2001: A Space Odyssey.        I remember when Siri and other search engines came out and it was a craze about how you could talk to a machine, and it would talk back to you. I’m not exactly sure about all the evolutionary changes that Siri has gone through in the decade-plus they have been active, as they told me they started working as an assistant on October 4, 2011; the bottom line is that Siri is so boring now as they don’t even talk to me anymore.      I’m not sure if there is a setting I need to change, but I was extremely disappointed by my interaction with Siri. Perhaps other tech companies have simply caught up with voice-to-text and artificial intelligence having voices, and Apple didn’t feel like programming it anymore. All the questions I asked Siri were received with lifeless answers, most of whic

Metropolis Movie Notes

  Metropolis Movie Notes ·      Based on a novel by Thea Von Harbou ·      Made in 1927 ·      Clock with only 10 hours on it o   It is something that pours into the rhythm of the lives of the workers ·      Many prisoners? In same uniform looking depressed; they live underground and don’t see the sun “in the depths” ·      Priveliged kids can run and play above the ground like normal ·      Eternal gardens are fueled by underground workers, members have very exotic fashion ·      The workers have terrible conditions and are replaced quickly because they have no value ·      Metropolis is a giant city where planes are able to fly in-between the buildings ·      Stereotypical depiction of wall street office ·      The workers are “where they belong” according to the boss Joh Frederson ·      11881 ·      Metropolis is very diverse and welcoming ·      The boss has a satanic woman robot that looks like C3PO named ·      Maria has a religious (Christian) message for the people in the cata

A.I./Pinocchio Essay

         The novel  The Adventures of Pinocchio  by Carlo Collodi and the film  A.I. Artificial Intelligence  directed by Steven Spielberg have numerous similarities, not just because of how much the fairytale drives the plot in the movie. At the very core of both stories, the plots follow the negative events that unfold when a machine is brought to life and given the qualities of a human child. However, that’s also where a lot of similarities end.  Although the robot child David from the movie is inspired by the story of Pinocchio to find the Blue Fairy to become a real boy, he is already more lifelike than Pinocchio could ever be. The marionette eventually gets his wish granted after numerous run-ins with police and near-death experiences while David remains an imitation of flesh and bone throughout the entire story. As children, the two characters’ behaviors are complete opposites. From Pinocchio’s inception of coming to life, although still as a marionette, he is not a well-behavin

Love, Death & Robots Notes

Love, Death & Robots Notes   Zima Blue   ·      Large murals with shapes of the same shade of light blue ·      The murals got bigger and bigger and he started to build planets with the same color ·      Zima Blue modified his body so much so he can live forever ·      He made a swimming pool, the same one that a woman used to test robots ·      The woman’s robot began to make its own decisions but was passed from owner to owner ·      That robot became Zima Blue ·      Zima Blue is the color of the tiles that was used in the original pool ·      He unmakes himself back to the original form of the first robot ·      Yves Klein Blue ·      Derek Jarman   Three Robots ·      The Siri robot is the funniest but her delivery is the worst ·      The other two robots have completely human voices but think more like the traditional resemblance of robots ·      Orifice? To talk about eating ·      Very cynical towards humans in this city full of human skeletons ·      A cat is still alive ·