| Theatrical Release Date: April 28, 2010 Cast: Directed by: Synopsis: |
|
| In the woods he meets a pretty young stranger who tells him about a local myth concerning a nazi experiment camp. After a confrontation with hunters the couple take refuge in an abandoned bunker where the soldier is forced to endure a more shattering nightmare than the fears he experienced in Iraq" (Shadow).
Check out official website here –>Link |
|
Archive for April, 2010
| Theatrical Release Date: TBA Cast: Directed by: Synopsis: |
|
| In this triller, the FBI teams up with the U.S. Marshals in a hunt for escaped sociopath James Bennett, after he commits a series of meticulously planned murders. Unfortunately, Benet is going back to his childhood home, where six graduate students are studying his surroundings for thier thesis.
Check out official website here –>Link |
|
| Theatrical Release Date: TBA Cast: Directed by: Synopsis: |
|
| The clip was created by Dartmouth, Nova Scotia filmmakers Jason Eisener, John Davies, and Rob Cotterill, and starred David Brunt in the title role. Brunt is not returning for the feature, Eisener has cast Dutch actor Rutger Hauer in the role.
Check out official website here –>Link |
|
| ‘I’ve always avoided sequels, unless I felt there was something fresh,’ director says of returning to 1979 classic. By Larry Carroll Originally posted on Apr 22 2010 repost here 4/25/2010 It isn’t overstating things to say that Ridley Scott is among the greatest filmmakers of all time, and "Alien" is among the greatest films of all time. So how could anyone not be eager to learn every little detail about his prequel to the 1979 classic? On Thursday (April 22), we caught up with the "Robin Hood" director to speak with him for next week’s MTV Summer Movie Preview. |
|
| And when he mentioned that he was feasting his eyes upon the latest "Untitled ‘Alien’ Prequel" script pages, we couldn’t help but ask some questions.What followed might be the most revealing interview Sir Ridley has given thus far on the top-secret project. Read on for exclusive details concerning the prequel’s plot, creature design and the woman — not named Sigourney Weaver — who will soon be kicking alien ass.
Read the rest of the Interview here –> MTV.com |
|
By Robert McMillan April 22, 2010
After distributing a buggy antivirus update that apparently disabled hundreds of thousands of computers on Wednesday, McAfee is still at a loss to explain exactly what happened. McAfee says that just a small fraction of its corporate customers — less than 0.5 percent — were affected by the glitch, which caused some Windows XP Service Pack 3 systems to crash and reboot repeatedly. McAfee blamed a bad virus definition update shipped out Wednesday morning, Pacific time, which ended up quarantining a critical Windows process called svchost.exe. By the end of the day, the antivirus vendor still couldn’t say exactly what caused the problem. “We’re investigating how it was possible some customers were impacted and some not,” said Joris Evers, a McAfee spokesman, speaking via instant message. One common factor amongst the victims of the glitch, however, is that they’d enabled a feature called “Scan Processes on Enable” in McAfee VirusScan software.
Read more here –>Link
By Techtree News Staff, Apr 22, 2010
At times, certain leaks are so amazing that they just blow your head away. Engadget was tipped with details about Dell’s upcoming smartphone – Lightening. The new Dell Lightening phone runs Windows Phone 7 mobile operating system and also has Qualcomm’s 1GHz Snapdragon processor inside. With aesthetic looks, Dell has added a bunch of features but this slider smartphone won’t hit the stores until the end of this year. Yes, it’s going to be a long wait. Dell had entered in the smartphone arena with Dell Mini 3i last year in August. Leaked details of Dell Lightening smartphone amazes with killer combo of Windows Phone 7 and 1GHz Snapdragon microprocessor inside. Soon, we’ll get see more smartphones sporting 1GHz microprocessor, it seems. Lightening has 4.1-inch WVGA OLED capacitive display made by Samsung with multi-touch support. Being a slider, Lightening also endures with full QWERTY keypad when the top panel is slided upwards.
Read more here –>Link
By Jon Stokes, April 21, 2010
Last night peHub reported that Google has bought stealth-mode hardware startup AgniLux for an undisclosed sum, and Google confirmed the purchase today. AgniLux was started by members of the P.A. Semi team who jumped ship shortly after Apple bought the company in 2008, and was rumored to be working on some kind of energy-efficient server processor. The purchase has occasioned some speculation that Google might start making its own server processors in-house, or that the company might be looking to compete outright with Apple by making an A4-killer and putting it into a tablet. The former is unlikely, and the latter is certainly wrong. While it’s a virtual certainty that someone, somewhere within Google is paying very close attention to the possibility that ARM-based products may soon make for decent server parts, there would have to be a really compelling performance/watt case for Google to go to the expense of fabbing a boutique ARM design in the kinds of relatively low volumes that it would use for its datacenters.
Read more here –>link
Phenom II X6 1090T Black Edition and 1055T at bargain prices
By Sebastian Pop, April 22nd, 2010
By now, end-users must well know that it won’t be long until Advanced Micro Devices starts selling its very own six-core central processing units, codenamed Thuban. In fact, AMD is expected to land quite a few sales, considering that, unlike Intel, is has models prepared to address not just the high-end, but also the mainstream market. Naturally, this means that consumers are eager to buy them. The second effect, it seems, is that retailers have a tendency to jump the gun and start selling the parts ahead of launch. Retailers setting up a certain component for pre-order is not unheard of. In fact, this practice is quite common, as it allows said vendor to score some sales at higher prices than the ones at launch. However, in this case, something quite different has occurred, namely that a Norwegian retailer has actually started shipping some AMD Phenom II X6 models to its customers. The retailer in question is known as Amentio.no. At present, it has only the Phenom II X6 1055T and the high-end 1090T Black Edition up for order, but their prices seem to be more than just convenient. The roughly hundred 1055T chips that the retailer has in stock are priced at only €197, which is very low for hexacore parts, at least compared to Intel’s $999 Gulftown. The price becomes even more enthralling when considering that a frequency of 2.8GHz is quite reasonable, especially since it can go up by 500MHz with Turbo Core.
Read more here –>Link
| Theatrical Release Date: May 7, 2010 Cast: Directed by: Synopsis: |
|
| They search for help and find an isolated villa. The next day they awake to find themselves trapped in a terrifying make shift basement hospital along with a Japanese man. A German man identifies himself as a retired surgeon specialized in separating Siamese twins.However his three "patients" are not about to be separated, but joined together in an horrific operation. He plans to be the first person to connect people via their gastric system, in doing so bringing to life his sick lifetime fantasy "the human centipede".
Check out official website here –>Link |
|
By Dan Nystedt, April 20, 2010
A battle over chip manufacturing prowess in the flash memory chip industry appears to be brewing between Samsung Electronics and IM Flash Technologies, a joint venture operated by Intel and Micron. Samsung, the world’s largest memory chip maker, unveiled NAND flash memory chips produced using advanced 20-nanometer production technology on Monday, just months after IM Flash Technologies said it had started producing the first commercial NAND flash chips made using 25nm technology. A competition between the companies for chip manufacturing supremacy would be good for users. In general, smaller production processes lead to lower-cost, speedier and more power-efficient chips, which are exactly what’s needed for today’s mobile devices.
Read more here –>Link


Twitter
Google