By Steve Harvey At a high-profile event yesterday that marked Technicolor's 100th anniversary, the company unveiled ongoing research to use DNA as an archival format for audio and visual materials; if its experimentation works out, the company could potentially store every movie ever made, for example, in the space of a Lego block.
by Clive Young I was wandering around a junk shop a few weeks ago when I came across this behemoth. 'What the heck is that?' I asked, but the junk shop owner didn't know anything about itnot even how much it cost. "You want it? What's it worth to ya?" he shrugged. Well, I wasn't in the market for a Rube Goldberg AV system, but I sure wanted to know more about it, so I started Deep Googling .
"People don't have the budget to score [with an orchestra] when you're working on million-dollar-and-under pictures. But if you can give them a taste of what it would feel like to have a real string section, then it's your responsibility to do it." - Marc Vanocur, Media Toaster