Official AT&T Mobile TV Details [Mobile TV]

Gadgets, Cellphones, Smartphones, Mobile TV, mediaflo, At&t, att No Comments »

Looks the leaked info was pretty much spot on. AT&T’s Mobile TV service is debuting May 4 and it’ll come in three tiers: Limited, Basic and Plus for $13, $15 and $30. It’ll launch in 58 major markets (all the ones you expect). Besides the nine live broadcast channels, there’s a bank of 150 time-shifted shows like the 30 Rock finale, plus Sony’s movie channel, dubbed PIX—it’ll have stuff like Memento and Kung Fu Hustle (have you ever seen a fist this big?). First phones to get in on the action are LG’s Vu and Samsung Access. Hit the jump for all the dirty details.

AT&T MOBILE TV PREMIERES SUNDAY, MAY 4

AT&T to Deliver MediaFLO USA’s FLO TV Service in 58 Markets on New AT&T-Exclusive Handsets Designed for Mobile TV Viewing; AT&T Introduces CNN Mobile Live, PIX and CNCRT, a Special Concert Channel

SAN ANTONIO, May 1, 2008 — We interrupt your scheduled programming with an important news bulletin: AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T) and MediaFLO USA Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Qualcomm Incorporated (Nasdaq: QCOM), announced today the May 4 availability of the AT&T Mobile TV with FLO™ service. This powerful new mobile television service will provide around-the-clock access to some of today’s most popular television programs — live and in color on the mobile phone.

To ensure an unmatched mobile television experience for consumers, AT&T is introducing two new exclusive handsets: the Vu from LG Electronics MobileComm U.S.A. Inc. (LG) and the Access from Samsung Telecommunications America (Samsung).

* LG Vu: A sleek and stunning device, the Vu gives you a clear view of TV, Web, pictures or videos on its large interactive touch screen. It also lets you get the utmost in mobile entertainment with a music player, 2.0 megapixel camera and Bluetooth® capabilities. The LG Vu is available for $299.99 with a two-year service agreement and after a $100 mail-in rebate.
* Samsung Access: This stylish handset features a large landscape display, ideal for delivering a rich viewing experience and an internal antenna for exceptional reception. It’s a great device for customers who are looking for advanced multimedia capabilities such as a camera, external stereo speakers, stereo Bluetooth, AT&T Music, CV, of course, AT&T Mobile TV. The Samsung Access is available for $199.99 with a two-year service agreement and after a $100 mail-in rebate.1

“AT&T Mobile TV is more than a new entertainment service — it is an experience that will significantly change and enhance our customers’ mobile lifestyles,” said Mark Collins, vice president of Consumer Data for AT&T’s wireless unit. “With this in mind, it was imperative that we launch this revolutionary service on devices that were optimal for the best mobile viewing experience imaginable. We worked closely with LG and Samsung to deliver these two iconic handsets, which are designed with the specific needs of what will soon become our Mobile TV viewing audience.”

AT&T Mobile TV proves that big things come in small packages. The service will offer unmatched TV-quality programming from leading news and entertainment brands: CBS Mobile, ESPN Mobile TV, FOX Mobile, NBC 2Go, NBC News 2Go, MTV Networks’ COMEDY CENTRAL, MTV and Nickelodeon, as well as PIX and CNN Mobile Live, which are both AT&T-exclusive channels on MediaFLO USA’s FLO TV™ service.

PIX, from Sony Pictures Television, offers a variety of contemporary films, including comedies, cult classics, action films and family favorites from the studio’s vast library.

CNN Mobile Live provides users with access to 24 hours of breaking news with live streaming anchored coverage from CNN.com Live as well as CNN’s most popular programs, including “American Morning,” “Lou Dobbs Tonight,” “CNN Election Center,” “Larry King Live,” “Anderson Cooper 360º,” and “CNN International.”

“Our research revealed that news and movies were the two most popular program categories consumers wanted to watch on their mobile phones. We have exceeded their expectations with AT&T Mobile TV,” said Collins. “Together with MediaFLO USA, we are changing the picture of television-viewing by giving our customers an innovative way to stay connected to breaking news from CNN Mobile Live, an arsenal of movie favorites with PIX and a formidable lineup of other quality programming while on the go.”

Additionally, for the next 60 days, the AT&T Mobile TV service will feature CNCRT, a special concert channel delivered by Control Room, a leading producer and distributor of world-class entertainment. Every day, for 24 hours, the CNCRT channel will air one of approximately 30 recently recorded concerts from major recording artists, such as Avril Lavigne, Chris Brown, Fall Out Boy, Jay Z, Sheryl Crow, Akon, Daughtry, Lenny Kravitz, Rage Against the Machine and more.

“With the authority of CNN, the cinematic variety of PIX and the star power of CNCRT, AT&T Mobile TV adds an exciting dimension to the FLO TV service,” said Gina Lombardi, president of MediaFLO USA. “We are thrilled to be working with AT&T to provide consumers with such a powerful new mobile entertainment experience.”

MediaFLO USA’s award-winning FLO TV service features premium full-length, high-quality programming delivered to mobile phones over MediaFLO USA’s own dedicated multicast network. Using an intuitive program guide, AT&T customers will be able to easily flip from one channel to the next on their mobile FLO-enabled phones to experience the best-quality mobile TV.

There are more than 150 simulcast and/or time-shifted programs, as well as live sports events, currently available for viewing. Below are examples of some of the entertaining TV programs and events that are scheduled to air the week of May 4:

* CBS Mobile: New episodes of “CSI,” “CSI:NY” and “How I Met Your Mother”
* CNN Mobile Live: Live breaking news coverage, including real-time results from the Democratic and Republican primaries in North Carolina and Indiana on May 6.
* Comedy Central: New episodes of “The Daily Show with John Stewart” and “The Colbert Report”
* ESPN Mobile TV: Live game coverage as well as ESPN Mobile TV shows such as “ScoreCenter,” “ReSET” and more
* FOX Mobile: New episodes of “Bones,” “Back to You,” and LIVE Big 12 College Baseball
* MTV: New episodes of “The Hills,” “Real World: Hollywood” and “The Paper”
* NBC 2Go: LIVE NHL Stanley Cup Playoff and Final games and finale episode of NBC’s “30 Rock” (Thurs., May 8)
* NBC News 2Go: LIVE coverage of the Indiana and North Carolina Democratic Primaries
* Nickelodeon: Episodes of “SpongeBob SquarePants” and “iCarly”
* PIX: “Memento,” “In The Line of Fire,” “Groundhog Day,” “Kung Fu Hustle” and “Resident Evil”

AT&T Mobile TV will launch in 58 markets including Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, San Diego, Seattle and Washington, D.C. The service is a perfect complement to the wireless carrier’s already impressive portfolio of wireless video offerings, including CV, which gives subscribers mobile access to thousands of on-demand video clips — including news, sports, entertainment, music and movie previews. With the addition of Mobile TV, AT&T customers now have even more choices in how they experience and enjoy video content from their phone. As with CV, AT&T Mobile TV will have the Parental Controls feature, which provides content filtering and purchase blocking on your phone so that you can restrict access to content that may be inappropriate for younger viewers.

Monthly access packages for AT&T Mobile TV begin at $15 a month for the Basic package, which includes unlimited access to Mobile TV, as well as access to the exclusive CNCRT channel for a limited time. AT&T also offers a Mobile TV Plus package for $30 a month, which includes unlimited Mobile TV, unlimited mobile Web browsing on MEdiaTM Net and unlimited CV mobile video. Customers can also subscribe to a limited basic package for $13 a month, which gives them access to four channels: CBS Mobile, FOX Mobile, NBC 2Go and NBC News 2Go. Because AT&T Mobile TV operates on MediaFLO USA’s own dedicated multicast network, AT&T customers do not incur data or voice charges. Additionally, programming is subject to change, and sports programming is subject to blackout restrictions.

To learn more about AT&T Mobile TV, including service, programming and handset details, visit www.att.com/mobiletv beginning May 4.

[AT&T]


Original post by matt buchanan

Kickstart: First Blackberry Flip Phone Needs a Kick in the Design Pants [BlackBerry]

Gadgets, Cellphones, Smartphones, Top, Blackberry, RIM, kickstart No Comments »

This fine piece of flip phone is Blackberry’s very first clamshell, codenamed Kickstart. It’s not very attractive—it’s got a smugly RAZR-esque silhouette. The inside is Pearly, with a trackball and SureType keyboard. Boy Genius says that the internal LCD is “decent looking,” but the shot of the external has a weird sheen over it, so it’s hard to tell there. Sort of an odd choice from RIM, I think—was there an untapped demand for a flip Blackberry? No other specs, but expect it by the end of the year. Profile shot after the jump or hit BGR for the full five. [BGR]


Original post by matt buchanan

Building B/Sezmi One True Set Top Box Aims to Kill TV as You Know It [Home Entertainment]

Home Entertainment, Video, dvr, ip video, vod, building b, sezmi No Comments »

Last week, we had a demo of the TV godbox we reported on last summer by Building B—now Sezmi. If anything, their claims have actually gotten bolder: They’re promising the “first complete TV 2.0 solution” that rolls up traditional TV with movies, on-demand, DVR and internet video, all presented seamlessly to viewers. That’s a tall order, and moreover, an extremely complicated one.
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Let’s start with the setup. They’re getting content to you in three ways. The vast majority of TV viewing is of the major broadcast networks: ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox. Happily, they’re broadcast for free over the public DTV waves. That subwoofer looking thing? That’s a DTV receiver for that picks up all of those broadcasts. Second, they’re working on content deals with cable channels, which be delivered via private broadcast (via satellite, actually) that your receiver also picks up. The final leg is video delivered over broadband, to the box, which is also a DVR with a terabyte of storage: Some of the broadband pipe will be used for the cable content (depending on the load vs. private broadcast), but it’s also the pipe for YouTube and net video obviously.

Ideally, you won’t know (or care) about where the content is coming from. One of the big things they’re pushing, which I don’t know people will be able to swallow is the idea of personal portals over channels. Basically, it’ll learn your viewing habits and create what are essentially smart playlists of content, drawn from broadcast, cable stored content and internet video, all meshed together—kind of like TiVo on Web 2.0 crack, since it has a TV Guide menu with a list and times of shows and whatnot as well, but decentralized from the channel metaphor. Each person in the house has their own button on the top of the remote and it’ll switch to customized programming for them. The web 2.0 business comes in not only with the streaming video stuff, but you can recommend shows and content to other users. Channels can also have their own portals, kind of like hyper web pages oriented around their shows and on demand video content. (It’s in this sense that it wants to kill TV as you know it.)

Of course, contextual ads are part of the personalization shebang, but I thought they were done well, and at this point, it’s part and parcel of anything of that nature. Plus, the ads combined the whole freeness of the broadcast networks over the public DTV waves equal cheapness—supposedly half the monthly rate of cable, though they wouldn’t get more specific than that.

All of that sounds (sorta) great in theory, but for one, I think it’s too complicated for the average consumer, in the sense that they’re still pretty grounded on the channel metaphor. Ironically it’s the non-attached, non-HD-fanatic that they’re targeting here—your aunt and uncle, maybe not your grandmother. I don’t know if they’ll bite.

The other issue is more on the business end. They’ve gotta sign a lot of deals to make this happen, both with content partners (I neglected to mention any like CNN or ESPN because Sezmi hasn’t announced any deals yet, though some are in place) and with a front-end partner. That is, you’re not gonna go out and buy a Sezmi box. What you would buy, for instance, is a Sprint box made by Sezmi as part of a triple play package (WiMax would go great with the service actually, too bad infrastructure isn’t there). And neither AT&T nor Verizon will sign up, they’ve got their own video dealios.

The backend is also, like I said, extremely complicated—anyone remember Moviebeam? They tried a somewhat similar trick with riding the public airwaves. On the other hand, they have some serious talent on the board and there’s a lot of promise in the ideas and concept, but I can’t shake the feeling we might looking at another Moxi, if only because of the business end. I hope I’m wrong.

They’re starting trials now in a couple of areas, though NYC isn’t one of them, with the hopes of a wider rollout by the end of the year.

SEZMI UNVEILS NEXT GENERATION TELEVISION OFFERING
The first complete TV 2.0 offering that seamlessly integrates traditional television with movies and Internet video, optimized for on-demand viewing and is personalized for the viewer

BELMONT, Calif. - May 1, 2008 - Sezmi Corporation (formerly known as Building B, Inc.) today unveiled a next generation television offering that includes many industry firsts. Sezmi also announced that it is commencing trials in pilot markets in preparation for commercial launch with broadband service providers and national retailers later this year.

Sezmi is designed to address fundamental shifts in consumer television viewing behavior and is the first television offering that is:

• A complete TV 2.0 solution: Sezmi delivers all television content, including broadcast and cable network programming, movies and Internet video, in one simple package, unlike Internet-driven offerings that do not include traditional television.

• Optimized for on-demand viewing: Sezmi embraces the migration of consumer TV viewing away from appointment-based viewing and gives consumers the flexibility to watch what they want, when they want. Sezmi’s primary user interface organizes content as program lists (e.g., My Top Picks, My Genres, My Channels) that dramatically simplify the browsing and discovery of television content.

• A seamless integration of live, stored, on-demand and Internet video: Sezmi removes the artificial barriers between content from different sources and provides a single and consistent interface across live, stored, on-demand and Internet video.

• Personalized and tailored to the individual viewer: The Sezmi remote control has unique buttons for individual members of the household. Each user is presented with a personalized homepage-like screen that organizes a line-up of content that is specifically matched to the user’s routines and preferences.

• Extending the benefits of social networking to the TV: Sezmi subscribers can share playlists with friends and family, contribute to community ratings of shows and benefit from community recommendations.

• Designed for self-installation: Sezmi is a simple, out-of-the-box wireless product that provides consumers a high quality television experience in minutes.

“Consumers are waiting for the television industry to catch up and meet their demand for flexible, advanced and personalized features in their television service, just like they’ve come to expect with the Internet, wireless communications and digital media,” said Kurt Scherf, vice president and principal analyst with Parks Associates.

“With the impending digital transition, the consumer shift to on-demand viewing, high definition, Internet
video, and other disruptions, now is the time for a true television alternative to emerge. From what I’ve seen, Sezmi’s differentiated approach, leadership and industry relationships makes it a strong contender to fill this void.”

“Sezmi focused on the television consumer and built an entirely new television offering from the ground up to meet the needs of viewers that want a premium experience at an affordable price,” said Buno Pati, Sezmi co-founder and chief executive officer. “We have rallied support across multiple industries and are excited to work with our partners to offer a new and differentiated TV choice to consumers.”

A Unique Approach to TV 2.0
“To deliver the full range of content that consumers expect at an affordable cost we had to create a network that overcame the limitations of broadband and better aligned with mass market content consumption,” said Phil Wiser, Sezmi co-founder and president. “Our integrated solution seamlessly combines the efficiency and scale of broadcast delivery with the interactivity and access of broadband. As a result, we are able to deliver a next generation television experience to a much larger group of consumers, and we can do it today.”

Sezmi has developed the FlexCast™ video distribution technology that combines terrestrial digital broadcast television with existing broadband infrastructure to cost effectively deliver video content. The system utilizes available capacity in existing digital television broadcast networks and creates a private, secure broadcast transmission for content. The resulting platform provides a breakthrough television experience without
the need to upgrade existing broadband infrastructure. Sezmi has also developed a cutting edge, smart antenna indoor reception system that makes both its private broadcast and existing terrestrial TV broadcasts accessible in an unprecedented manner. This network-attached reception system can be placed in any location in the home and requires no user adjustments.

A Multi-Industry Opportunity
Sezmi is working with leaders in the broadcast, broadband, content and advertising industries to create an entertainment platform that delivers enhanced value and new opportunities as the TV industry navigates through the major disruptions it is facing. Sezmi affords broadcasters the opportunity to realize significant returns on their digital investments through a proven subscription television business model and targeted advertising. Sezmi has entered into agreements with broadcasters in its initial launch markets.

“Sezmi’s innovative platform enables broadcasters to enhance their core service, while creating new revenue opportunities,” said Colleen B. Brown, President and CEO Fisher Communications. “Advertisers continue to tell us they want this type of measurable targeting to generate greater efficiencies on television and as broadcasters, we need this type of audience intelligence to more effectively connect our viewers with new programs.”

As an end-to-end television service that incorporates an integrated broadcast solution, Sezmi is the ideal triple-play video companion to voice and data services offered by broadband service providers. “Sezmi creates a unique opportunity for Internet service providers and telecommunications companies looking to offer customers a differentiated triple play with its on-demand, personalized and affordable video service,” said Jeff Gardner, president and CEO of Windstream Communications. “Unlike IPTV, Sezmi’s innovative service utilizes the existing broadband network and does not require a significant capital infrastructure investment.”

Sezmi enables content companies and advertisers to capitalize on current industry disruptions to create new business opportunities. Content providers are able to reach additional viewers, enhance their brands in an on-demand environment and drive higher CPMs through targeted advertising. Sezmi creates a unique opportunity for content companies to engage with viewers and strengthen their brands as consumers migrate towards an increasingly on-demand experience.

“Advertisers are demanding Internet-like efficiency with TV advertising. They want to target the right customer with the right ad, and have accurate data on viewer response,” said Tim Hanlon, Executive Vice President of Denuo Group, a Publicis Company. “Sezmi is a breakthrough service in this area. For the first time, advertisers will know
exactly who—whether it’s mom or dad or the kids—watched their commercial. Sezmi will enable improvements in advertising effectiveness and ultimately increases marketing ROI, two important goals in today’s cluttered ad landscape.”

Sezmi has established partnerships with broadcasters, broadband providers and contentcompanies to commence technical trials in preparation for commercial launch across several major U.S. markets later this year.

About Sezmi
Sezmi Corporation has developed the first complete TV 2.0 offering by combining traditional TV content, movies and internet video in a single easy-to-use product. Designed from the ground up with next generation TV functionality, Sezmi puts consumers in total control with a personalized on-demand viewing experience. Sezmi is working with partners from broadcast, broadband, content and advertising industries to create a new TV choice for consumers. Sezmi will be offered to consumers through broadband service providers and national retailers. For more information, visit www.sezmi.com

[Sezmi]


Original post by matt buchanan

HD DVD’s Death Hasn’t Helped Blu-ray Sales, Which Are So Bad NPD Won’t Talk About ‘Em [Blu-Ray]

Gadgets, Home Entertainment, blu-ray, hd dvd, format war No Comments »

bluacc.jpgYou guys have apparently been listening to our warnings about not jumping into the Blu pool just yet. NPD says that even after HD DVD stopping peeing in it and lied down to die, not only have Blu-ray sales have only jumped a meager two percent (after falling 40 percent from Jan.), but they’re so bad, they won’t even release the actual numbers. NPD pegs price as one major factor, with the wait for BD-Live players as another. Course, it’s more likely the deeply feared DVD problem: For most people, it’s still good enough. [Yahoo, NYT]


Original post by matt buchanan

Lip Gloss Without SPF Increases Skin Cancer Risk

makeup, lip+gloss, skin+cancer, spf No Comments »

Here’s some more horrifying news just in time for summer: wearing shiny lip gloss with no SPF actually increases
your chances of getting skin cancer on your lips. Apparently, it’s just like coating your body in baby oil: it magnifies the sun’s rays and the damage to your skin.


But some dermatologists say that slathering on shiny lip glosses can actually increase your risk of developing skin cancer. Of course, wearing any lip product without SPF doesn’t exactly shield the thin skin from sun damage. But the slick, shiny nature of the gloss could be making the sun’s UV rays hit harder, some experts say.



“These lip glosses can make more of the light rays penetrate directly through the skin instead of getting reflected off of the skin’s surface,” says Dr. Christine Brown, a dermatologist at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas. (You’re covered, however, if you wear lip gloss with SPF.)



At worst, say some dermatologists, the resulting sun damage can lead to potentially fatal forms of skin cancer. An estimated 3,500 new cases of skin cancer of the lips are diagnosed each year, and 90 percent of those cancers are squamous cell carcinoma. While that form of cancer isn’t usually particularly serious, it can be more aggressive on the lips than on other parts of the skin. If left untreated, it can cause disfigurement, and in very few cases, it can spread to other organs and become deadly.

Happily, there is a very easy fix for lip gloss junkies who don’t want to switch to a more opaque lipstick: just buy lip gloss with SPF. Here are three we like:
Kiehl’s Lip Balm with SPF 15 which retails for $9.50 a tube: Bobbi Brown Lip Balm which retails for $15 a tin and Paula’s Choice
Moisturizing Lipscreen with SPF 15. It retails for $7.95 a tube. We buy tons of this one; we use it under our lipstick everyday. It’s fragrance free and provides a perfect undercoat for lipstick. But be careful with it: it’s a bit soft, so if you twist the stick too high off, it will break or melt. Just twist it up a little bit and it works great.



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Original post by ShoppingBlog.com

AT&T Giving Free Starbucks Wi-Fi to iPhone Users? [Free Wi-Fi]

Apple, Wi-Fi, Wireless, Top, iPhone, At&t, att, starbucks, Free Wi-Fi, barnes and nobles, free wireless access No Comments »

attiphone.jpgSome Macrumors readers are reporting that AT&T’s Starbucks and Barnes and Noble Wi-Fi hotspots are coughing up free internet access for iPhone users. When you hit up the wireless at these locations, you get directed to a special iPhone-formatted page that asks for your phone number. Once you punch that in, you’re free to check email and Facebook at decent speeds. AT&T declined to comment, but didn’t officially deny anything. [MacRumors]


Original post by Jason Chen

RC-12 Mini Camera is Tiny, Works Underwater, Wireless to 30 Meters [Spy Tech]

Video, cmos, cameras, rc-12, spy tech, wireless video cameras No Comments »

The RC-12 Mini Camera is essentially a 1.2 GHz wireless camera with a 30 meter range, a 2.7 MP CMOS sensor and waterproof housing. It looks about as big as a lego brick and can shoot 45 minutes of video on a single charge. This camera isn’t anything I have any practical use for, but it’s the type of gadget I would find a non-practical use for (and no, I won’t drop some lame girls’ locker room reference here — wait…shit). I’d probably have this thing express shipped to my doorstep if it didn’t cost $270. That hurts. [Killian Nakamura via Ubergizmo via Oh Gizmo!]


Original post by Adrian Covert

Oprah Reveals a Bit About Her New Tom Cruise Interview

celebrity, oprah+winfrey, tom+cruise No Comments »

Photo of Tom Cruise on the Oprah Winfrey ShowOprah Winfrey has
revealed
some tidbits about the return of Tom Cruise to her show. Yes, he’s coming back for two episodes: one in the studio and one in Telluride, Colorado where he takes Oprah snowmobile riding.


I can exclusively report that Ms. Winfrey’s upcoming interview with Cruise includes questions about Scientology, his verbal smackdown with Matt Lauer on the Today show and, yes, the infamous couch-jumping incident.



Winfrey actually revealed these details herself during this weekend’s Las Vegas taping of her joint interview with Tina Turner and Cher.
And that isn’t all Winfrey shared.
The first of the two-part Cruise one-on-one has already taken place at his estate in Telluride, Colo., Winfrey said. “Oprah said Tom gave her a ride on a snowmobile,” one Vegas audience member told me. “She also said Katie and Suri were there for the interview, too.”



Before the Cher and Turner taping at Caesars Palace, a member of Winfrey’s entourage hit the stage to ask everyone not to repeat anything they were about to see or hear. “She had everyone repeat in unison, ‘What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas’ several times,” my source said.
Come on, O! Did you really think everyone in the audience of 4,000 or so was going to keep a lid on it?

The Telluride segment will air this Friday. The studio interview will air on May 5th. It’s the 25th anniversary of Risky Business, the film that made Cruise a star so he’s on some kind of publicity tour about it. It was a very funny movie, we admit. But it reminds us of how little baggage Tom used to have back in the day. Nobody knew much about him, other than who he was married to and what his next film was. Good times.



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Original post by ShoppingBlog.com

Hollywood “Stars” Punk’d Into Going to Scarlet TV Premiere [Lg Tv]

Scarlet, lg tv, Lindsay Lohan, scarlet tv No Comments »

We weren’t the only ones fooled by LG’s Scarlet TV that masqueraded as a TV series. LG managed to convince Hollywood’s red carpet-loving “starlets” to come out as well, thinking that it was for the premiere of some show made by a Smallville and Sopranos director. We hope attendees got to take home one of these HDTVs, because we’d be pissed if we had to put on pants for nothing. [MavrixOnline via Shiny Shiny]


Original post by Jason Chen

How Iron Man Gets Dressed [Iron Man]

Movies, Clips, suit, iron man, Trailers No Comments »

Here’s a trailer I haven’t seen before of Tony Stark getting ready for a night on the town. No Tux, but the Mark III suit. What’s impressive about the movie’s suit design is that they’ve not only detailed the red and gold of the outer shell, but the entire underlayer of the chassis and fastening system. That chest repulsor still looks like a simple halogen bulb, though.


Original post by Brian Lam