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Wired Top Stories
  • Will 3-D Sportscasting Save the Movie Theater? - Thu, 24 Jul 2008 15:00:00 GMT

    Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban gave a presentation to the FCC about the future of digital media, and his number one point -- obviously a little self-serving, but it wouldn't be Cuban if it wasn't -- was that people will be able to go to a movie theater and watch a major sporting event in 3-D.

    Crazy talk? Not at all. We're going to see a lot of experiments in this realm over the next couple of years. As I wrote about in Portfolio, movie theaters are increasingly installing expensive equipment that will let them show digital 3-D films. Theaters will be looking for ways to make extra money on that investment.

    Meanwhile, Pace Technologies has been developing live-action 3-D cameras chiefly for Hollywood. Pace cameras were used to shoot Journey to the Center of the Earth, and right now are shooting James Cameron's upcoming 3-D movie, Avatar. As it turns out, the cameras can also shoot live events in 3-D.

    Earlier this year, I visited Pace and saw a demo -- and it truly is a different experience from seeing a game on 2-D television. It's not like seeing it live, either, but something different and interesting. As the Pace folks explained, for instance, they discovered that constant cutting to different shots -- a TV staple -- isn't necessary in 3-D. It seems better to let the camera take in the full-court action. Viewers feel a little like they're watching from halfway up the arena seats.

    Cuban experimented with showing a Mavericks playoff game in a theater, and the NBA tried a closed-circuit 3-D broadcast of the 2007 All-Star game, showing it to only 600 people in a Las Vegas theater.

    But there are high hopes in both sports and the theater industry around this. Imagine the local theater showing the Super Bowl in 3-D, or the World Cup soccer finals.

    I'd go.


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  • Pittsburgh Cancer Center Warns of Cell Phone Risks - Thu, 24 Jul 2008 11:13:00 GMT
    University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute Director Dr. Ronald B. Herberman issues an unprecedented warning to his faculty and staff: Limit cell phone use because of the possible risk of cancer. His alarm is based on early, unpublished data and runs counter to numerous studies and a public lack of worry by the FDA. But Herberman says science takes too long to get answers and believes people should take action now -- especially when it comes to children.
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  • Microsoft Exec Who Led Yahoo Buyout Team to Leave - Thu, 24 Jul 2008 04:00:00 GMT
    Kevin Johnson, the Microsoft executive in charge of Windows and Web operations and an key player in the company's (thus far?) failed bid to buy Yahoo, is leaving the company to become CEO at Juniper Networks. It's unclear whether he jumped or was pushed.
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