chriskirkgeek, where in the heck did you get the idea that 'most people' hated Avatar and the new Star Trek? Avatar has an 82% favorable rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and Star Trek has a 94% favorable rating from the same site.
That's the basis for the whole series, yes.Neo has a box in his head that translates his thoughts into digital form
The "flash-forwards" he experiences in Zion could be read as subconscious thoughts and images picked up in the Matrix but not expressed until some later time. As for broadcasting signals, the fact that Sentinels operate individually suggests that they have broadcasting transmitters of their own. So Neo's theoretical transmitter wouldn't have to be that strong at all; it could be like an iTouch picking up a wireless internet connection in a Starbucks. That, and the whole upper levels of the planet could be bathed in a low-level Machine radio frequency could for all we know.and another box that broadcasts them as radio waves of sufficient power to either 1)reach Machine City from miles underground
Ethernet can yield stronger and faster connections than wireless.What's really hilarious is that when Neo gets to Machine City, they opt for a wired connection instead. WTF is up with that?
I admit that these explanations are somewhat tenuous, and if you hate the sequels for them I certainly can't blame you. The philosophical implications of the transmitter hypothesis are also a bit iffy: in the first movie, pretty much all machines were inherently evil at worst and dehumanizing at best. By the end of Revolutions, however, the hero is a full-on cyborg and the reformed Matrix looks like a relatively pretty place to live. It's almost as if the Wachowskis decided that living hooked up to a computer for hours and hours on end isn't all that bad... so long as they got their royalties.
Of course, then there's the other alternative theory to the false (imho) "blue matrix" explanation, and that's simply that Neo's got some Jedi-style supernatural magic even in the real world. And since that magic only concretely expresses itself in digital terms, the philosophical result would be much the same as above.
See http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglementCan you give me the idiot's guide explanation?
http://objectmatrix.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!BA7DBC3966A6FA91!1870.entry or http://searchcio-midmarket.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid183_gci341428,00.html
Basically, imagine you have 2 particles. Say electrons, for arguments sake.
The 2 electrons form part of a system, like an atom. We know from observation of this particular type of system, that one electron spins one way, the other spins in the opposite direction.
The moment we observe one electron spinning clockwise (relative to our point of observation) we automatically know (without observation) that the other one moves counter-clockwise.
It doesn't matter how separated these two particles are, they can now be separated by light years, and they still share this relationship. The moment we observe one spinning clockwise, we instantly know the rotational state of the other one.
This sounds like mere common sense, until you apply that other nonsensical quantum law, the law of superposition which states that the particles actually have no rotation at all until we observe it. It's like Schrodinger's cat - it is both spinning both ways and not spinning at all in a kind of 'nether' state, until it is observed.
If that's true, then it's almost like there is some kind of instantaneous transmission or communication between the two particles, regardless of distance between them - though quantum phsyicists state there is no information shared in this way.
At this point, my head starts to hurt normally.
Blade II and III
Gotta go with Shock Treatment. It's the superior sequel to Rocky Horror Picture Show, and is better in every way.
Gotta go with Shock Treatment. It's the superior sequel to Rocky Horror Picture Show, and is better in every way.
I wasn't aware that there were any sequels to The Rocky Horror Picture Show.![]()
Caveman
Journey To The Far Side of the Sun aka Doppleganger. But I'm a huge Gerry Anderson fan and love the movie, even if it's premise was copied in an early 70's TV movie called The Stranger with Glen Corbett.
Cheers.
Caveman
Hah! I haven't watched it in probably thirty years, but I confess that my college roommates and I watched CAVEMAN everytime it was on cable . . . which was fairly often back then!
Does anybody besides me like Orphan?
Aka Stranded in Space? Only good for riff fodder on MST3K.Journey To The Far Side of the Sun aka Doppleganger. But I'm a huge Gerry Anderson fan and love the movie, even if it's premise was copied in an early 70's TV movie called The Stranger with Glen Corbett.
Cheers.
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