There was a Google - sponsored concert in Singapore featuring star DJ Paul Oakenfold, a Cisco event at which Lightwave data determined the winner of a pitch competition, and a TED conference at which Lightwave compared attendees» self - perceptions with their responses to
video scenes meant to evoke feelings like fear and compassion.
Not exact matches
This is done through the use of 360 - degree
video and / or virtual re-enactments of a
scene broadcast onto a headset like the Oculus Rift (which is owned by Facebook (FB)-RRB-, or even using low - tech
means like the Google (GOOG) Cardboard viewer, which essentially just holds a smartphone in front of the watcher's eyes.
Every day was like the blueberry muffin
scene in Casino, if you don't know what the
means watch this
video!
Evenflo has since decided to abandon the WHO Code in favor of more marketing, and one of the results is this advertisement that mocks breastfeeding in public, depicting uncomfortable and pushy in - laws who claim that breastfeeding
means no one else can feed and thus bond with the baby, and includes an awkward
scene after the mom pumps (We wanted to be able to share the
video with you but after a strong backlash it appears to have been pulled but not after millions had already viewed it.)
Total Run Time: Approximately 60 minutes, Stereo / Mono Audio Additional Bonus Materials: Deleted
Scene / Grim Grinning Ghost Anatomy of a
Scene / Friday the 31st Fun Facts / pop - on
video commentary for selected segments Photo Gallery / Behind - The -
Scenes of Bad Seed Storyboards / Ding Dong Three Audio Tracks: 5.1, 2.0, Commentary Three Subtitle Tracks: French, Spanish, English Soundtrack Listing: Tales of Halloween Main Title - Lalo Schifrin Sweet Tooth - Christopher Drake The Night Billy Raised Hell - Bobby Johnston Trick - Joseph Bishara The Weak and the Wicked - Austin Wintory Grim Grinning Ghost - Christian Henson Ding Dong - Sean Spillane This
Means War - Michael Sean Colin Friday the 31st - Joseph Bishara Limbchoppalooza!
In essence, Snyder directs five extended length music
videos (nearly each significant
scene contains a cover of a well - known pop hit to ham - handedly provide the thematic
meaning of it) featuring sexy girls in tight clothing unleashing a god - awful lot of violence against undead, fantasy and mechanical villains (remember, got ta keep that PG - 13 rating to appeal to that all important adolescent male target audience).
Blu - ray Extras: Whale Tales: Melville's Untold Story / The Hard Life of a Whaler / Chase & Pollard: A Man of
Means (The only feature on the DVD) / Lightning Strikes Twice / Commanding the Heart of the Sea / Island Montage / Deleted
Scenes / Ron Howard's Captain's Log (10 different
videos!)
Both the audio and
video are compressed horribly, and it quickly becomes clear that DS hardware was never
meant to run these cut
scenes.
From the very first
scene of the stupefyingly shallow, but highly energetic b - movie, Crank, suspension of disbelief is an absolute must — I
mean, what kind of hit man would actually leave
video evidence of a murder at the
scene of the crime, or give the intended victim a window of opportunity to exact revenge on him?
I
mean, I'm from North Carolina, I make retarded little
videos about videogames that showcase how strange I am, and yet here I am being escorted behind the
scenes about to get an exclusive look at Assassin's Creed II by the lead level designer.
The removal and replacement represents a big shift of some sort behind the
scenes and the leaked
video was before the change, thus
meaning that the leak may not bear much resemblance to the final product.
In 2011, whilst capturing his still - life
scenes for the project in Gaza, Brian could hear flash grenades and tear gas exploding in the background - just watch the
video below to see what I
mean.
He made a name for himself on the Turkish and international contemporary art
scene by creating
videos that raise fundamental questions about the
meaning and significance of human activity and labor as well as the authentic experiences of people while they are working on the real projects.
Ed Atkins (b. 1982) is a British artist whose oeuvre consists largely of photography and digital
videos in which he incorporates computer - generated characters — CGI avatars — and
scenes as a
means to explore the ways in which digital forms of representation can create new versions of reality.
Ed Atkins (b. 1982) is a British artist whose oeuvre consists largely of photography and digital
videos in which he incorporates computer generated characters — CGI avatars — and
scenes as a
means to explore the ways in which digital forms of representation can create new versions of reality.
Ed Atkins's oeuvre consists largely of digital
videos and photography, in which he often incorporates computer generated characters and
scenes as a
means to explore the ways in which digital forms of representation can create new versions of reality.
The
video loops only once an hour,
meaning that for roughly 45 minutes of the hour, the viewer sees only an illuminated white shape that is uninterrupted until the first car
scene appears.
All of this
means that the
scene in this
video clip from Medsharks.org will be ever rarer without some big changes:
And, of course, that Google Glass is (for now) arguably as plain as the nose on the face of the wearer while — notionally out of site (added — oops: I
meant «sight», but the pun almost works) so out of mind — it's easy to forget the likelihood that the same
scene is being captured by the traffic surveillance cameras, the outward - looking surveillance cameras on the buildings in the area, perhaps the ATM camera behind one, and the cameras &
video recorders on the smartphones or tablets that the nearby tourists used to take pictures.
The
video is obviously
meant to create some sort of emotional response in the viewer, compiling
scenes of people killing people in videogames without any commentary.
On the ceiling above the MRI machine is an LED panel that can show images like nature
scenes and
videos that are
meant to be calming, which the patient can swipe through to choose via the iPad.
In general, the ZenBook Flip S provided a vibrant productivity and
video - watching experience, although gamma was a little dark at 2.4,
meaning darker
scenes in
videos were a little harder to see.
Dolby Vision, on the other hand, allowed for metadata on a per -
scene or even per - frame basis,
meaning that brightness and other
video details could be adjusted for the best results throughout and entire show.