Sunday 20 September 2015

A Boy and His Robot: Big Hero Six, Interstellar, Jupiter Ascending and Black Sea

A bit of a movie catch-up with three sci-fi and one psychological thriller.

First up, Interstellar. With a looming ecological catastrophe, former astronaut Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) is asked to venture through a recently discovered wormhole to find a new home for Humanity.


While the acting and special effects are good, at two hours plus, this seemed a little dragged out to me. Plus, although they had expert advice on the physics concepts involved, the plot did seems a little contrived (I didn't understand how they managed to get down to the first planet without being ripped apart by tidal forces from gravity stong enough to slow down time). Quite a good pizza movie, though, and a more positive spin on the future than most films.

Next, Black Sea. Unemployed submariner Robinson (Jude Law) is offered an opportunity to salvage gold from a sunken U-Boat.


A claustrophobic and tense thriller, with some genuine starts (for me anyway), it's spoiled by technical errors (there's a reason they use diesel in ships: it's inflammable) and the silliness of the plot. An average pizza movie, but no more than that.

From the Wachowski siblings, who brought you the Matrix, comes Jupiter Ascending. Jupiter (Mila Kunis) a cleaner in Chicago turns out to be the genetic twin of a long dead Queen of... Lord, I can't be bothered. Instead of showing you the trailer, I'll let Honest Trailer's explain (if they can):


I didn't think it was that bad, but, like they say, the plot has holes you could drive a tank through and the acting is bad enough to make Sean Bean look like Laurence Olivier. Harmless enough, I suppose, but more expensive than Black Sea for a not much better result.

Lastly, we have Disney's attempt to cash in on the Manga phenomena with Big Hero Six. After losing his brother in a fire, Hiro (geddit?) Hamada and the formers robot creation Baymax try to find out what happened.


Although still a Disney film, and, therefore, a bit cardboard cut-out, it's a reasonable plot and good enough characters to make it an enjoyable 90 minutes. I liked it.

Sunday 6 September 2015

From the 3R's to 6 (or 7) D's, with Julia Begbie

Subtitled "Digital Disruption within Education", this was a presentation I attended yesterday, hosted by the London Futurists at Birbeck. Julia and her colleagues at the KLC School of Design have created the U.K.' s first completely on-line Design degree.


Essentially, aside from giving an overview of her experiences creating online education, Julia presentation centred on the affects of MOOC's (Massive Open Online Course) on education. Having been on a few courses via Coursera, this was quite topical, and Julia showed that the initial popularity, failure and resurgence of the MOOC's mirrored the Gartner cycle quite accurately:


The 6D's in the title of the presentation are from the entrepreneur Peter Diamandes, "the 6 D's of Exponential Growth":


Julia added a 7th D, Data. Education (citing Khan Academy in particular) benefits from feedback through the huge data sets created by the courses. She also showed a few sections of Sir Ken Robinson's talk animated by the RSA a while ago:


Overall, it was a good presentation by an enthusiastic speaker. However, there was something that's been bothering me about technological, and with it human, progress, which this presentation illustrates unconsciously. What was preventing all this happening years ago? All the bits where there: Drupal, for example, now at version 7, has been around for fifteen years; Wordpress for about twelve. Why the wait?