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Frank DBiography: married ,grand kids, Vietnam Vet,retired law enforcement. USF Alum, Liberal democrat advocate for equality,civil rights,Environmental protection #resistance
2019 / genres: Comedy / Audience score: 261 Vote / Michael Winterbottom / Resume: Greed is a movie starring Asa Butterfield, Isla Fisher, and Sophie Cookson. Satire about the world of the super-rich / Laptop watch cinema greed series.
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USA should outsource German labour practice will cease. Laptop watch cinema greed watch. Laptop watch cinema greed 2017. “Our inequality materializes our upper class, vulgarizes our middle class, brutalizes our lower class.” –Matthew Arnold, English essayist (1822-1888. About Laptops Picking out a new laptop can be a daunting task but thankfully, with our range of laptop voucher codes the cost of your new device doesn’t have to be a worry. We have offers for a range of well-known electronics stores which sell a wide variety of makes and models, so you can pay less without losing out on choice. If you’re looking to upgrade your old system, browsing online is the perfect place to start. Online retailers offer great shopping tools to help narrow down your search and find a new machine to fit your lifestyle. Look for a particular make or operating system, filter your search by memory and storage space, or simply look for a laptop in your price bracket and enjoy a great bargain. A laptop can be a useful tool to have in the household, for browsing the web, staying in touch with friends and family, working from home and for the kids to do their school work too. Of course, the great thing about a laptop is its portability – meaning it can be moved around the house, taken to a local coffee shop or packed in a bag for your travels. When you own a laptop you can do your online shopping from anywhere with Wi-Fi too! To change the way you surf, work, connect and share, shop around online and use our laptop discount codes to save money on your chosen model. Whether it’s a Windows, Chrome or Mac system, a 17 incher, touch screen or a compact netbook, there’s something out there for you.
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Norma Desmond reckoned the silents didn’t need dialogue. But she never came to the Giornate. This may be a silent film festival but it’s good to talk. And listen. So I spent about as much time listening to people chat today as I did watching them mouth words. And yes, today did mark the return of benshi artist Ichiko Kataora to Pordenone with the Japanese silent Chushingura (1910-1917). So there is a method to this festival madness, I promise you. First I attended the Women and Film History International meeting where there was lots of good news being shared, including forthcoming updates to the wondrous Women Film Pioneers Project website and a feminist film festival in Frankfurt. If you want to join Women and Film History International you can sign up online, and rumour has it you may even win a prize. From there I went to the collegium dialogue (well I caught a little of Neil Brand in masterclass mode too, in the interests of full disclosure), which was on the European Slapstick and Nasty Women strands. Steve Massa, Ulrich Ruedel, Maggie Hennefeld, Laura Horak and Elif Rongen had to plenty tell us about how to uncover the lesser-known histories of silent comediennes, whether the barrier is language, gender, or even formats. If your films survive on 28mm, it’s just so much less likely that they will be digitised, and there’s so much less chance of you being remembered alongside the stars of slapstick. These five are some of my favourite speakers – erudite and passionate and casting a fresh perspective on film history with almost every answer. And the questions from the Collegians were typically astute. Reginald Denny in 1926 Credits: Kimberly Pucci Collection At this point I took a break to see some films but I was back in the jaw-nate for two Filmfair presentations. Kimberly Pucci spoke very passionately about her grandfather Reginald Denny, and the book she has written about him, Prince of Drones. We all knew Denny was an aviation pioneer as well as an actor, right? No excuse not to, now. I also enjoyed the short presentation from Jeffery Masino of Flicker Alley on the joys of published media and the tribulations of bringing silent film to Blu-ray. Despite the challenges in his field, he seemed fairly chipper about things – and why not when his company puts out such lovely discs? Turns out I am not the only person here present who cherishes their Flicker Alley calendar. I should get on to the silents now, but I have just two further bits of chit-chat. Tonight at the evening show prize for last year’s best Collegium essay was handed out to Stephan Ahrens, and the Haghefilm restoration fellowship was given to Leenali Khairna, who had brought the colour back to a Pathé historical drama about Napoléon: 1812 ( The Retreat from Moscow, 1912), which we were lucky enough to see on the Verdi screen. But my day belonged once again to Weimar cinema and a fascinating (and owing to slight mixup, briefly baffling) selection of short films themed around “The social question”. There was a persistent rodent theme to this programme, which opened with an introduction to breeding white mice as a wholesome hobby and concluded with the powerful have-and-have-nots propaganda film Zwei Welten (1929), which ultimately concluded: “There are two types of rats in the world … the full ones and the hungry ones… and they want to decide your future! ” The onus was very firmly on the viewer to make a difference at the ballot box and divert the country’s future path to democracy rather than dictatorship. Well, it’s enough to make you queasy. Polizeibericht Überfall (1929) For those who want a little more artsiness and storytelling to sugar the political pill, the best thing here was surely Ernö Metzner’s avant-garde drama Polizeibericht Überfall (1929), which follows the “money is the root of all evil” idea to its ultimate conclusion. Here the casual dropping of a single Reichsmark in the street sets off a chain of greed and criminality that results in a bloody murder. Powerfully done, with image distortions and jarring close-ups. It’s a portrait of an economy teetering into crisis and about to pull the fabric of society down with it – but all on a miniature scale. Scary stuff. This must have been a tricky programme to play for, but Donald Sosin made it seem easy, following each twist of tone and tack as if it were natural. I especially liked his music for Polizeibericht Überfall, not least when he incorporated his own “clinking-clanking sound” into the music, simply by emptying his pocket change over the piano. Tonight we had a Reginald Denny double-bill, and a swift change of music in between. John Sweeney jauntily accompanied a short Universal promotional film from 1925, in which an east-coast journalist is shown, wide-eyed, around the studio lot and introduced to its roster of big names, including Denny, of course. A veritable “City of Stars”, as the tagline had it. Plenty of clips from Universal silents both famous and obscure too. All of which was to introduce a new restoration of the Denny feature What Happened to Jones (1926), with a vigorous new score played with gusto by Zerorchestra, written and conducted by Juri Dal Dan. I’ll tell you the plot but it won’t take long. Denny is getting married in the morning, but he gets drawn into a poker game, which is raided by the police. He and a pal (Otis Harlan) go on the run, and try to make it back to the church on time, along the way hiding out in a Turkish bath, dashing around in drag and even pretending Denny is a bishop. If it were made a few years later and less than half as long it would be a Laurel and Hardy two-reeler, but at 70 minutes and with Denny and Harlan it has a little more weight, and like Oh, Doctor! earlier in the week, it is enviably tightly scripted. Check out the neat bow of an ending – it’s a beauty. This cup of tea isn’t quite my bag, but reader you better believe me, I giggled and some at this. Why? Well, firstly because Denny sells it so well – he’s so serious even when the film is so silly. Hippfest supremo Ali Strauss nailed it on the steps of the Verdi when she compared his appeal to that of Cary Grant. And he was certainly quite a diverting sight stripped down to his cloche and vest I will admit – purely in the interests of evaluating the mise en scène, you understand. Second, because of Harlan and more specifically the comic chemistry between him and Denny. And last but by no means least, because of the scene-stealing presence of Zasu Pitts as a housemaid who is not half as daft as she looks. And with that, I think I have talked enough for today. Speak to you tomorrow! Intertitle of the day: “I never learned to parlez Francais so you may as well put a lid on it! ” That titbit from Min Svigerinde Fra Amerika (My Sister-in-law from America (1917), playing in the Euro Slapstick strand, comes to you from Lawrence Napper. Yes, my intertitle spies are everywhere. Pordenone truthbomb of the day: Paolo Tosini was talking at the Flicker Alley presentation today about the relatively poor availability of silents on DVD. “The question is always: ‘I love the movie that I saw here yesterday. Where can I see it? ’ The answer is ‘here, yesterday’. ” Yup. You can read more about the festival, and all of the films, on the Giornate website. Silent London will always be free to all readers. If you enjoy checking in with the site, including reports from silent film festivals, features and reviews, please consider shouting me a coffee on my Ko-Fi page.
Could you provide an update to your previous articles on the system requirements for Minecraft? I would love a recommendation on a laptop for my 10-year-old son. I have a £500 budget, and I would have no problem with a refurbished device. Craig This is a frequently-asked question, and similar queries have come from Jo (seven-year-old son, £450 budget), Lauren (13-year-old son), Ronda (12-year-old daughter), and Natalie (11-year-old son, £200 to £250 budget). I answered much the same question in December last year ( What’s the best cheap laptop for running Minecraft? ), in December 2015 ( What’s the best laptop for running Minecraft? ) and earlier. The principles have not changed, so you may still find them useful. However, the products change, which is why the question keeps coming up. PC or not? The main edition of Minecraft is written in Java, so it runs on PCs running Microsoft Windows, Apple’s MacOS, and Linux. Most parents want the same machine to cover schoolwork and other requirements on a budget, so they generally opt for Windows. There’s also a “pocket” or Bedrock Edition of Minecraft that runs on Windows 10, games consoles, tablets, Gear VR, Apple TV and Amazon’s Fire TV. Many players want the main edition because the Bedrock version does not support “mods” or modding platforms such as Pixelmon. Mojang is still busy programming the Bedrock Edition to add many of the capabilities of the main version, but without its performance being sandbagged by Java. There are already Add-Ons, Resource Packs and Scenarios to change Minecraft’s appearance and behaviour. Bedrock is still some way from the Java version. Nonetheless, running Minecraft as a Windows 10 app is one way to run it on a less powerful laptop while still having a machine that’s good for school work. The latest Windows 10 Minecraft is available as a free trial app on the Windows Store, so it’s worth a go. You can always install the full version later. Running Minecraft More is better … ‘Extra power will give you better frame rates, longer rendering distances, more textures etc, and the ability to run more mods. ’ Photograph: Voisin/Phanie/REX Most serious games can consume as many resources as you can throw at them, and Minecraft is no exception. Unfortunately, Minecraft also has to run the Java “virtual machine” ( JVM) that runs the Minecraft code. Today’s targets, for running Minecraft, are a relatively recent Intel Core i5 or i7 or equivalent processor, 8GB of memory, a 128GB SSD, and a 15. 6in Full HD screen with a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels. By “relatively recent” I mean a 5th generation Core chip, or later. (We’re currently moving to 8th generation versions. ) In every case, more is better. Extra power will give you better frame rates, longer rendering distances, more textures etc, and the ability to run more mods. You should still be able to run Minecraft pretty well on a recent Core i3 with 4GB of memory, either a 64GB SSD or a traditional hard drive, and a 1366 x 768 screen, though you may have to dial back some graphical effects. However, you should still be able to run Minecraft on less powerful machines, if you use the lowest settings and install the Optifine mod to get a usable frame rate. (I assume everybody will install Optifine on whatever they buy. ) In previous years, I’ve looked for laptops with dedicated graphics cards with their own 2GB or more video RAM. Today’s mainstream laptops use the processor’s integrated graphics capabilities and the PC’s main memory instead. This makes it an even better idea to buy a desktop PC than a laptop for running Minecraft and other games. Desktop towers have plenty of room for fans so they can use hotter processors that run faster than the laptop equivalents, and even cheap chips like the Intel Pentium G4560 become viable. Many desktops also have dedicated graphics cards, and if they don’t, you can probably install one in an empty expansion slot. (Check the upgrade options before you buy. ) Gaming laptops? Most of the laptops that still have dedicated graphics cards are now described as “gaming laptops”, and they bust your budget. For example, Currys PC World has an HP Pavilion Power 15-bc350sa with a Core i7-7500U processor, 8GB of memory, a 1TB hard drive and an Nvidia GeForce GTX 950M for £679. 99. That’s not a pocket money price. HP’s real “gaming laptop” is the Omen, which you can get with a GeForce GTX 1050 for £799. 99. Manufacturers used to sell reasonably affordable laptops with dedicated graphics cards, but those days appear to have gone. You can hunt around for second-hand gaming laptops, but these are not the stock in trade of professional refurbishing companies. They mostly sell ex-corporate “fleet computers” such as ThinkPads, HP Elitebooks and Dell Latitudes. If you decide to go for a refurbished machine, an Elitebook might be the best bet. Possible choices Having eliminated games machines, we’re left with mainstream laptops. The usual suspects include Lenovo’s 110 and 320 models, HP Pavilions, and Asus VivoBooks. Take your pick … The best specification I can find within a £500 budget is the Lenovo Ideapad 80XL035QUK, which has an i5-7200U, 8GB of memory, a 2TB hard drive and a 1920 x 1080 screen for £499. 99. There are lots of different Ideapad 310, 320 and 320S models around, and many of them have 128GB SSDs. Unfortunately, most of those only have 4GB memories and 1366 x 768 screens. You can increase the memory but they usually have only one memory slot. You have to remove the 4GB and insert an 8GB module (over £80), instead of simply adding 4GB (around £45). Switching to a 16GB module could cost roughly £165. For someone on a smaller budget, the IdeaPad 310-15ISK is still good value at £329. 95 from John Lewis. though you can find other sources by searching for 80SM01MAUK. It has a nippy Core i3-6100U processor, 4GB of memory, a 1TB hard drive and a 1366 x 768-pixel screen. The seventh-generation i3-7100U isn’t really any faster. Perhaps a new or second-hand XBox One is a good choice. Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images Currys PC World has a similar laptop with a slower Core i3-6006U processor for £299. 98. This chip has a PassMark benchmark score of 3131, which is close to if not below the minimum required to run full Minecraft well. In fact, it’s better to have a chip that scores over 4000. For comparison, the latest Intel Core i7-8700K scores 16274. There are a couple of 14in machines that are also worth considering for their 128GB SSDs. The HP Pavilion 14-bp070sa has a Core i5-7200U processor, 4GB of memory and a 1920 x 1080-pixel screen for £449. The Asus VivoBook X405 is a nicer laptop for £20 less, but it only offers a Core i3-7100U. Low-end systems Going below £300 involves a huge reduction in processing power, unless you can find a discounted bargain. The options include the slow AMD A6-9220 (PassMark 2368), the slower Intel Pentium N4200 (PassMark 2002), the Intel Celeron N3160 (PassMark 1695) and the Celeron N3060 (PassMark 990). None of these processors is intended for gaming, or any serious computing. The real problem is that if you stick to my recommended minimum of 4GB of memory, even low-end computers are not particularly cheap. For example, a 14in HP 14-bp066sa with a Celeron N3060 and 64GB of eMMC storage – which is slower than an SSD – costs £249 at Currys PC World. You are giving up a lot of processor speed and storage space to save £50. It’s really not worth it. Dropping from an IdeaPad 320-14ISK with an i3-6006U processor (£299. 98) to an IdeaPad 320-14IAP with a Pentium N4200 (£279. 99) only saves £20. The result is that I can’t recommend today’s low-end machines for playing the full version of Minecraft, even if – as mentioned above – they can run it at the lowest settings with Optifine. The “pocket” or Bedrock Edition would be a better bet, and even that would run better on a new or second-hand Xbox One. If you can’t justify spending around £300, you could take a flyer on the Linx 12X64, which is now available for around £200. Eligible parents and students can get it for £179. 99 from Microsoft. The Linx 12X64 is a 12. 5in tablet with a detachable keyboard and a slow Intel Atom x5-Z8350 processor (PassMark 1314), so it’s nobody’s idea of a games machine. However, at least it has 4GB of memory and 64GB of storage, so it’s not as cramping as most ultra-cheap machines, which have 2GB and 32GB. It even has a Full HD 1920 x 1080-pixel screen. I found it a decent and reliable machine at its original £299. 99, so deducting £100 makes it a bit of a bargain. Have you got a question? Email it to This article contains affiliate links to products. Our journalism is independent and is never written to promote these products although we may earn a small commission if a reader makes a purchase.
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