Domain: ithaca.edu
Stories and comments across the archive that link to ithaca.edu.
Stories · 6
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50 Years of the Twilight Zone
pickens writes "Fifty years ago on October 2, American television viewers first heard the words: 'You're moving into a land of both shadow and substance, of things and ideas. You've just crossed over into... the Twilight Zone.' Like the time-space warps that anchored so many of the show's plots, Rod Serling's veiled commentary remains as soul-baring today as it did a half-century ago, and the show's popularity endures in multiple facets of American pop culture, appearing nearly uninterrupted through television, syndication and DVD releases and under license to air in 30 countries. 'The whole idea of "The Twilight Zone" jumped off the television screen and became a catchphrase, a buzzword for something much beyond the TV show itself,' says Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University. 'When you say Twilight Zone, it's its own genre.' The original show ran just five seasons, 1959 to 1964, with 156 episodes filmed; Serling wrote 92 of them, and other contributors included Richard Matheson and Ray Bradbury. Anniversary observances were held at Ithaca College in New York, where Serling taught from 1967 until his death in 1975, and which keeps Serling's archives; and also at Antioch College in Ohio, where Serling was a student." -
50 Years of the Twilight Zone
pickens writes "Fifty years ago on October 2, American television viewers first heard the words: 'You're moving into a land of both shadow and substance, of things and ideas. You've just crossed over into... the Twilight Zone.' Like the time-space warps that anchored so many of the show's plots, Rod Serling's veiled commentary remains as soul-baring today as it did a half-century ago, and the show's popularity endures in multiple facets of American pop culture, appearing nearly uninterrupted through television, syndication and DVD releases and under license to air in 30 countries. 'The whole idea of "The Twilight Zone" jumped off the television screen and became a catchphrase, a buzzword for something much beyond the TV show itself,' says Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University. 'When you say Twilight Zone, it's its own genre.' The original show ran just five seasons, 1959 to 1964, with 156 episodes filmed; Serling wrote 92 of them, and other contributors included Richard Matheson and Ray Bradbury. Anniversary observances were held at Ithaca College in New York, where Serling taught from 1967 until his death in 1975, and which keeps Serling's archives; and also at Antioch College in Ohio, where Serling was a student." -
1UP, Plagiarizing, and Other Bits of Joy
Nathan writes "1up recently posted their Dead or Alive 4 strategy guide on their website. It didn't take long for users at the Dead or Alive Central forums to recognize their hard work analyzing the fighting game engine had been blatantly pasted into the strategy guide without any credit given whatsoever. While movelists are largely factual and can be argued to be public knowledge, the most incriminating evidence is the section on the evasion system, which had been pasted into the 1up guide with a few reworded sentences. Discussions are ongoing at Gaming Age Forums (with 1up members defending the writer of the guide) and DoA Central. Perhaps the most interesting bit about this is that just a month or two ago, Dan Hsu from EGM and 1up had famously written an editorial criticizing shady ongoings at other publications." I've reread the different pieces, and while I think the DoA Forums are a large basis of work, people need to read Kate Turabian's on how to cite research because I don't see this as plagiarism in the whole - just poorly cited. Update: 01/23 22:20 GMT by Z : 1up has announced that they've pulled the guide to review the situation. -
Rotating JPG Images Without Losing Data?
Another voiciferous Anonymous Coward asks: "Is there a such thing as a loss-less JPEG rotator? I want to rotate 90 degrees w/o the decompress recompress cycle which chews up jpegs. Supposedly there are some for windows, but I haven't found any for Linux. The GIMP opens and resaves and from what I can tell so does ImageMagik." -
What Video Card best Supports Xfree86-4.0
Keith Baker asks: "What video cards do people recommend for XFree-4.0. I want to have a card that is going to support Linux-DVD, Multiple Monitor (in conjunction with my Matrox), GLX/Open GL. I love my Matrox Mallenium/Voodoo combo. I am thinking this X-Mas is time to upgrade but I don't know how the features are going to compare in XFree86-4.0." -
Can the QuickCam work using the video4linux Interface?
This Anonymous Coward asks a question related to an older question on Video Converencing with a twist: "What software is written to capture from the Quickcam using the video4linux interface? I can only find bttv which is for video in a window I believe. I am looking for something like xfqcam but which uses the video4linux interface. Quickcam detection seems to really suck under linux especialy with the user level programs (xfqcam) and I figured the video4linux interface might work better. " Can anyone help out with some answers?