Author Archives: Andrew Hales

Game of Thrones Giveaway

Unless you’ve been living under a rock and/or not reading Therefore I Geek recently, you know that this weekend is the premiere of HBO’s Game of Thrones season four.  As part of our Game of Thrones week” and in celebration of the new season we’re giving away a pair of Funko Pop figures:  our favorite team, Arya Stark and Sandor “The Hound” Clegane.  These adorable little guys are the perfect beginning/addition to any fan’s shelf porn collection.  Enter to win starting right now (seriously, do it right now) until midnight (eastern time) on Saturday, April 5.  We’ll choose an entry at random and announce our winner right before the mid-Atlantic premiere of the new season.

Arya and The Hound and Arya

Arya and The Hound and Arya

 

RULES: Please read the rules for entry carefully.

1)      Entry is easy:  simply comment on this post! Comments must be of some substance. This means no one word posts or gibberish.  One entry per person will be accepted.*

2)      Unfortunately, entries can only be accepted from persons living in the United States.

3)      The winner will be chosen at random from all eligible entries and announced on April 6, 2014. Every effort will be made to contact the winning party before the public announcement. The winner will need to provide an address where the prize can be shipped. (However, this should not be included in the comment.)

4)      If it is determined that the winner is ineligible (not living in the United States, etc) then a new winner will be chosen at random, and contacted.

5)      Failure to comply with the rules listed will result in an ineligible entry.

6)      Final determination of eligibility will be made solely by the staff of Therefore I Geek.

*If your comment doesn’t appear right away DON’T PANIC!  The staff of Therefore I Geek tries to approve all comments in a timely manner, but we do occasionally require sleep.

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Filed under Geek Life, Giveaway

Winning Science April 2, 2014

Night vision goggles are pretty standard military equipment. While not everyone may have them, they are readily available if needed. The problem is that goggles can be bulky and limit the field of view. University of Michagan researchers are looking into ways to make night vision contacts. Using graphene and an insulating material, with an electrical current applied, infrared light can be converted to visible light. Eventually, this technology could be used in contact lenses, removing the need for goggles.

The goggles, they do nothing!

The goggles, they do nothing!

One issue still to be figured out is the need for greater light sensitivity.

With the presumed crash of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the hunt is on to recover the infamous black box before the battery runs out. It turns out that the black box isn’t quite as good as one would assume. While they are remarkably durable, the sonar devices that are designed to allow searcher to find them have batteries that only last thirty days after a crash. This has resulted in the information from a handful of black boxes being lost because the boxes couldn’t be found before the batteries ran out. After one particularly bad crash in 2009, several improvements were recommended, however many American carriers have not yet updated their equipment. There is also the option that instead of using black boxes, airlines could wirelessly send all the data from the plane to a data center where the information can be stored. This of course would require significant improvements to the aircraft and would be costly for the airlines.

Also, it turns out Black Boxes aren't actually black.

Also, it turns out Black Boxes aren’t actually black.

Pilots are also not too hot on this idea because they would essentially be bugged the entire time they are at work.

Twin studies are important in scientific research as they represent the two most identical persons that can exist. The closer two people are to one another, the better scientists can control the experiment. With this in mind, NASA will be conducting a twin experiment of their own. The space agency will be sending Scott Kelly to the International Space Station for a year while his brother Mark will remain here on Earth. Both men will be subjected to the same experiments to determine what, if any, differences there are in humans after prolonged time in space.

nasa_logo

Mark Kelly is the husband of former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords and Scott is a graduate of my alma mater, SUNY Maritime College.

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Filed under Weekly, Winning Science

Random Thought Generator Episode 2, Game of Thrones Season 3 Recap

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In this episode, Tracy and I take a walk around Westeros and remind ourselves and you of what happened in HBO’s Game of Thrones season three as we gear up for the premiere of season four.  We start in the North and work our way around the seven kingdoms, covering everything from characters and plot points to our favorite and least favorite red heads (hint: our favorite is NOT Sansa).

 

Show Links:

Mance Rayder

Orell (Warg)

Osha

Hodor

Game of Thrones: A Foreshadowing

Sansa

Lady Olena

Edmure

Blackfish

Ramsay Snow

Davos

Shireen (Stannis’ Daughter)

The Bear and The Maiden Fair

The Rains of Castamere

DragonBall Z

Asterix

Local Heroes

Dollhouse

Serenity

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Editorial | Review: Noah

***** SPOILER ALERT *****

This review will be discussing plot points which may be considered spoilers. Consider yourselves warned.

The word Ararat has a special meaning for believers of Judeo-Christian teachings.  To them it symbolizes hope, rebirth, cleansing—even the spring of a new world.  Interestingly, the word never makes an appearance in the new Hollywood film Noah, but the symbolism of Mt. Ararat, the final resting place of Noah’s Ark, is steeped into every aspect of the movie.

The first thing to mention about this movie was the acting.  Russell Crowe (Noah), Jennifer Connolly (Naameh, his wife), and Emma Watson (Ila, an orphan girl) are an all star cast, and I would expect nothing but a stellar performance from them.  They did not disappoint.  The supporting roles were filled with really excellent actors as well, with Anthony Hopkins as the surprising choice for Noah’s very elderly grandfather Methuselah, and Ray Winstone as the evil local king/tribe leader Tubal-Cain.  There was a cameo appearance by one of my all time favorite, underappreciated actors Martin Csokas, as Noah’s father Lamech.  The only supporting character that did not have an outstanding performance was Japheth, played by Leo McHugh Carroll, but this makes sense considering the lack of information about him in the source material.

Noah's family

Noah’s family

The relationships in this movie were probably the very best, most honest portrayal of a family that I have seen from Hollywood since the great epics of the late 1950s and 1960s.  True affection and forgiveness is difficult to fake , but between the excellent script and the superb acting through the family focused scenes at the beginning and end, this movie pulled it off.  I loved seeing Naameh (Jennifer Connolly) cuddling a baby Japheth in some of the opening scenes.  It is so easy to forget that babies were just as sweet and fragile 6,000 years ago as they are today.

There was a lot more story—not just Noah’s story—crammed into this film than I was expecting.  The movie started with the story of Man, and his fall.  This was presented in stop action animation and subtitles in a font that disturbingly resembled comic sans.  Three symbols from this initial story are repeated as a motif throughout the movie that alerts the viewer that they are now watching a dream or a prophecy revealed through a trance.  The first symbol is a green snake slithering through the grass, the second is a fruit that pulses like a beating heart, and the third is the silhouette of Cain’s upraised arm and hand grasping a rock to club his brother to death.  I appreciated why the motif was used but the last image was really hard to see, and every time it was used my concentration broke while my brain tried to figure out what I was seeing.

I appreciated that the movie bothered to tell the creation story, and that it did not take sides on the issue.  The story was told by Noah as a voice over a somewhat annoying time lapse animation.  He told the original, Biblical version of creation with each part of creation taking a day to complete, but the animation that flowed with the story seemed to mimic a type of evolutionary influence.  The movie seemed to go out of its way to avoid confrontation in other ways as well, such as strictly using “the Creator” to refer to God.

It seems as though the script writers decided that destruction of the entire world by an enormous flood at the will of the supernatural being who created it all was not enough drama.  In order to add to this, they included additional stressors to the family bond.

While the Biblical account clearly states that Noah, his wife, his sons, and their wives were all aboard the ark when the door was shut, the movie takes a liberal interpretation.  Noah decides that the Creator must be destroying the world to clean up the mess that man has made, and therefore must not want any more men in the new world.  That’s completely fine, though, because Noah and his wife are past child bearing, and the only other woman on the ark—an orphan girl that they took in who is now the love interest of their oldest son Shem—is barren.  Noah refuses to find wives for his other two sons, which is not taken well by the adolescent second son, Ham.  Because Ham is angry at his father’s choice, he does not tell Noah that Tubal-Cain, the erstwhile king of the area, has stowed a ride on the ark, and actively conspires to kill Noah, and repopulate the earth with his own children.

However, Noah’s plan for a humanless planet is thwarted by his wife, who goes to Noah’s grandfather, the aged Methuselah, and asks him to intercede with the Creator for her sons, so that they can have children and be happy.  Methuselah gives his blessing to Shem’s love interest, Ila, and she gets pregnant on the ship.  Noah is angry that his wife has gone behind his back and thwarted what he feels to be the Creator’s plan, and threatens to kill the child if it is a girl, so that there will be no chance at any more human children.  This, of course, leads to quite a bit of screaming and crying on the part of every person on the ark, and an emotional climax that has almost nothing to do with the fact that they have been stranded on a floating box for months with no certainty that they will ever get off.

Another addition to Noah’s story is the Watchers.  These are fallen angels who defied the Creator in support of Adam and his race, and were cast down to Earth.  I appreciated the physics of the story that the script writers were trying to tell:  creatures of light and energy crashing to earth melted the stone, which then cooled around them.  Unfortunately, this was a visually unappealing mess.  I was also left wondering why the stone that formed around them did not erode over the thousands of years that they had been on earth—especially since they were moving a lot.

The animals arrive two by two

The animals arrive two by two

Visually this movie was shot to be beautiful, not necessarily to be accurate.  This was obvious through the use of a lot of sound stage settings, with actions designed to showcase silhouetting of characters against a setting sun.  Most of the sets felt very unearthly (Methuselah’s mountain and the black volcanic ash expanses were mostly shot in Iceland).  The visual effects are beautiful, but they do break the viewer’s concentration from time to time.

The biggest problem that I had with this movie was the ambiguity regarding why Noah and his family were told to build the ark and be saved, and the other humans were to be destroyed.  The beginning of the film showed that the murder of Abel by his brother Cain was one of the big influences for humanity veering wildly off the Creator’s track.  However, Noah shows no compunction for killing humans because they’ve killed an animal.  I was confused, and still wonder if the director/writers were trying to equate vegetarianism with being a good person.  Since this is a movie about good versus evil, I would have preferred a sharper distinction between the good and the evil.

As a moviegoer, I really enjoyed the experience that this film provided, but probably won’t add it to my DVD collection.  As an admirer of the original account of Noah and the Great Flood, I hope that despite the additions to the story, people who have not read the original will be inspired to look it up and see what is really there.  I give this movie three and half Death Stars.3.5 Death Stars

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Filed under Editorial, Movie Reviews, Movies, Tracy Gronewold