THE SERIES PROJECT: Silent Night, Deadly Night (Part 2)

Posted by jakeandtycho - January 3rd, 2012

[EDITORS NOTE: In the pre-Christmas rush, and thanks to copious amounts of eggnog, this installment of The Series Project is running a week later than originally intended. which is actually okay, since none of the remaining Killer Santa movies in the Silent Night, Deadly Night series actually have Killer Santas in them. the second half of Professor Witney Seibold’s Planet of the Apes series will run next week. Here's where you can catch up on the first half of the Silent Night, Deadly Night series.]

welcome back, friends. It's nearly Christmas, and that can only mean one thing: It's time to scour our way past the two remaining chapters in the epic five-part holiday classic Silent Night, Deadly Night. yes, there are actually five movies based on the somewhat flimsy premise of a serial killer in a Santa Claus outfit. of all the Christmas horror movies in the world, it's odd that this one should remain so enduring. once you start delving into the series, though, and learn that the killer-in-a-Santa-suit idea was quickly abandoned, you'll find why it endured into five films. Heck, any Christmas-themed genre film could have been part 6. Batman Returns could have been titled Silent Night, Deadly Night 6: Penguins from Hell, and it would have had just as much logical connection. well, the Batman series may have changed a bit.

If you'll recall, in last week's article, I came up with the theory that Ricky, the killer from parts two and three, can have his consciousness shunted into new bodies using psychic powers. in the proceeding chapters, I'll explore that a bit further, as we fall down an odd well of witches, roaches, and some of the most awesome special effects you'll ever see in a middle-budget, straight-to-video horror sequel.

INITIATION: SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT 4 (1990) Directed by: Brian Yuzna

Y'know, I'm a little sheepish about admitting this, but for all the horror films I watch, I'm rarely scared anymore. Horror films may leave me a little unnerved, and some may even startle me several times, but few leave me with an icky sense of dread. I'm even more sheepish about admitting this, but Initiation: silent Night, Deadly Night 4 actually scared me a little. Mostly because I have a legitimate phobia of beetles and insects, and this film features a five-foot long cockroach.

Wait. A five-foot long cockroach? this is still the killer Santa franchise, right? well, as the third film proved, you don't need a killer Santa to call your film Silent Night, Deadly Night. and my guess is that Brian Yuzna made a film about bugs and witches set at Christmas, and it was the studio who chose to tack on the name of the franchise. Kind of what happened with Troll 2. Indeed, as my wife pointed out so eloquently, this is a film called Silent Night, Deadly Night which follows a Jew battling a Wiccan cult. I've learned that in other countries, the film was simply called Bugs, so it has been repurposed several times. As a sequel, this film has very little to do with the previous chapters. As a creepy, straight-to-video horror film, well, it's one of the finer ones I've seen.

Let's start with the connections. there is a character named Ricky in this film, but he is a wacky homeless man, and is played by Clint Howard. Ricky announces at one point that he is the Santa Claus killer, but it sounded like he was kidding. Ricky was working for a Wiccan cult in this film, so maybe they used their psychic powers to revive Ricky in a new body like what happened in the last film. Hey, it's the best I got. what can you come up with?

Ricky also is seen watching scenes from the third film in this one. this is something that has happened in all the sequels: the characters will sit to watch a movie, only to see footage from the previous film. in the second, not only was one third of the film devoted to clips, but Ricky watches a few scenes from the first film in a movie theater. in the third, we see footage from the first and second films in a shared dream sequence. we see footage from the second film on a dream TV. in this fourth film, Clint Howard watches part three and, as you'll find, in the fifth film, a character will watch footage from the fourth. I'm not sure if the filmmakers were being intentionally metaphysical, or were just winking at the audience. Either way, it's an odd trend.

Anyway, to the film: Initiation: silent Night, Deadly Night 4 opens with a spontaneously combusting woman falling off a rooftop in front of Clint Howard. That's a good way to get my attention, movie. Then we meet the aspiring reporter Kim (Neith Hunter) wanting to undermine her boyfriend Hank (Tommy Hinkley) at her newspaper job. Hunter is a pretty young thing, but is not much of an actress. She is very game, however, and that can be just as important as talent in this business. She begins to investigate the case of combustion, and meets the vaguely lesbian owner of a local bookstore, a kindly blonde woman named Fima (played by two-time James Bond girl Maud Adams). her investigation leads her to grow closer with Fima and her group of Wiccan friends.

Kim, meanwhile, has sort of a falling out with her boyfriend when she meets his anti-Semitic family. Kim is Jewish, you see, and Hank's dad will have none of that. She explains that most major religions have a winter festival of some kind, and Christmas is just Christians' version of it. when the Wiccans later use the term Solstice, it'll be our only real holiday connection. well, and there's a strangling with twinkle lights again. something for the fans, I suppose. There's a lot of Christmas imagery, but just as many menorahs.

the imagery in the film is pretty amazing. Kim often manages to spy faces peering at her from tabletops, walls, and windows. the faces are hard to spot, as they are disguised using props and stuff. one face is a dinner table set in such a fashion. Some faces appear in the branches of a tree. this was really neat, and even kind of eerie. You might find yourself, as I did, looking for the hidden faces in the movie. Kim is also having stomach problems, and water beetles start appearing all over her apartment. during one scene where she's puking in the toilet, a GIGANTIC FLIPING COCKROACK APPEARS ON THE WALL BESIDE HER!  Seriously, that roach is like FIVE OR SIX FEET LONG! HOLY LVING F*CK! that cockroach really, really, really scared me.

no wonder it scared me. the roach was created by the Japanese special effects man Screaming mad George, the guy who did the surreal effects for Yuzna's films Society and Faust: Love of the Damned. He also did the creature makeup for Alex Winter's 1993 cult classic Freaked, as well as the monsters in the little-seen but way-awesome alien fight film Arena. Screaming mad George's creature effects are unique in a world of awesome creatures. his effects were bulbous, slimy, and looked like particularly scary Rob Zombie cartoons come to life. his creatures fell somewhere in between legitimately weird cartoon, and disgustingly real slimeball reality. For some reason, his creatures have always had the power to punch me hard right in the imagination. the bug effects are weird enough, but pay attention. You'll be seeing some way freakier sh*t before the film is over. Remember the scene in Society where a bunch of people kind of oozed together into a big goopy orgiastic mass? We're on that level here.

Kim is increasingly seduced by Fima, and they even share a very tender little kiss in a park. Nothing wiggly or sexual. just a li'l smooch. Kim is then invited back to Fima's witchy apartment, is fed some tea and dates, and proceeds to have a long, long and insanely creepy dream sequence (?). She is stripped by witches, rubbed with oils, and Clint Howard shows up to feed a two-foot long maggot into her navel. the bug crawls up her abdomen, and exits through her mouth in the form of a three-foot long cockroach. her fingers bend backwards. She eventually snaps out of the drug-induced stupor, and flees to her boyfriend, even though Fima has been feeding her anti-male propaganda this whole time.

She explains what's happening to Hank, and he's surprisingly understanding, even though she's really bitchy. Clint Howard, though, breaks in, kills Hank (the apartment stalking scene is actually really tense and cool), and  takes Kim back to Fima where there's another hallucinatory ritual. She is tied to a chair in a meat locker, and Clint Howard, wearing a big phallic mask, rapes Kim at the behest of Fima. Ew. Gross. weird. Then the proceeding hallucination sequence shows Kim's legs fusing into a bug abdomen, and her fingers bends and twist in weird ways. Everything is coated in slime. when she snaps out of it, Fima tells her that she's been initiated, and that to become part of the Wiccan cult, she only needs to kidnap Hank's 11-year-old brother and murder him on the rooftop. If she doesn't, she'll spontaneously combust like that lady at the beginning. Indeed, we even see her ankles catch on fire briefly when she refuses. cool.

There's a big showdown, and Kim ends up defying Fima by twisting her fingers into a long wiggly flaming phallic wang, and jabbing it into Fima's stomach. Fima dies, and Kim flees. Clint Howard also flees.

this film is, as I have said, pretty damn awesome. the acting is bad, the story meanders, and the connection to the previous films is as sketchy as it could possibly be, but that was made up for by the weird-ass special effects and gut-wrenching pace. the film should perhaps stand alone. it needs no other films to heavy it down.

For the next film, the connection will be stretched even further. the only real connection, actually, is the appearance of Ricky. otherwise, we have a whole new premise in…

SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT 5: THE TOY MAKER (1991) Directed by: Martin Kitrosser

It's a new director, but this film and the fourth film were both the result of Brian Yuzna's hard work (he co-wrote the screenplay here), and feel of a piece. even though the effects aren't as plentiful, most of the designs were still made by Screaming mad George, though, so the look will still be impressive throughout certain sections. There's a weird Santa Claus toy in this film that has an evil electrified face, and can strangle you with extendo tentacles. Still nice and weird.

the premise for this fifth film revolves around a toy maker named Joe Petto (get it?) who is an aging and embittered alcoholic living in the basement of his toyshop. He sells some toys, but many he builds himself. one of the toys, we see partway through the film, is a character named Larry the Larvae [sic], who springs to life and burrows through a driving man's skull. Joe, we intuit, may be a homicidal genius who is creating toy-looking death machines in order to kill children for his own glee. Joe is played by the then-71-year-old Mickey Rooney, clearly slumming it. when I see well-known actors who have been working for decades, appear in b-horror films, I try to imagine their thought processes when approaching the admittedly broad and kinda ridiculous role. Rooney, in my mind, thought of Joe less as a cartoonish 1990s mad scientist killer, and more like a broken family man who turned to the bottle. At one point in the film, he had to play a robot double of himself. Who is to say what he thought of that.

yes, there are robot doubles in this film. but I'm getting ahead of myself. the story actually follows a young boy named Derek (William Thorne, another Hollywood moppet) who witnesses the violent death of his stepfather at the hands of the aforementioned Santa toy. the trauma leaves him mute and fearing all things Christmas. Meanwhile, his poor suffering mother Sarah (Jane Higginson) attempts to cure him by buying him toys and treating him well, and only occasionally screaming in frustration. Sarah, it turns out, is friends with Kim from the last movie. Kim seems to have a teenage son now, so either a lot of time has passed since the last film, or she just never mentioned her son in the last movie. Kim still looks very young, though (Neith Hunter couldn't have been older than 22 or 23 here), which means she must have had her son when she was, oh, 9 or 10. or maybe he's a nephew. It's never made explicit. there is indeed a scene in this film where Kim turns on a TV and watches a scene of Silent Night, Deadly Night 4. Now they're just messing with us.

Joe has a delinquent son as well, in the form of the leather jacket-wearing Pino (Brian Bremer from Pumpkinhead and Society) who seems to be the one who is pawning the dangerous toys off on people. Is Pino really the evil mastermind? Joe Petto and Pino? get it? get it? I think you may have guessed Pino's secret early on.

As I said, Derek doesn't speak throughout the film, which is actually kind of refreshing; child actors can, I think we can all agree, be grating in movies like this, especially if they're the big-toothed, open-mouthed moppets we're used to. Derek keeps witnessing horrible things, but is still too scared to speak. when someone gives him an anonymous gift, he wisely throws it away, only to see Kim's teenaged charge pilfer it and open it. He puts on a pair of in-line skates (and Rollerblades were very, very hot in 1991), which turn into Wile E. Coyote-style rocket boots, and jet the poor kid unwillingly around the neighborhood. the scene isn't played for laughs but it's pretty damn funny. we also see Derek's teenage babysitter get beset with war toys that fire real bullets. although the bullets must be made of soft stuff, as she gets shot right in the chest but only bleeds. She does not die. A mechanical hand also fingers her boyfriend during a necking session, and he loves it. this was a gag worthy of a Police Academy movie. the toys were all creations of Screaming mad George, though, and still, in small ways, have his nightmare cartoon quality.

There's a subplot about a mysterious drifter named Noah (Tracy Fraim) who seems to be stalking Sarah and Derek. He's also buying up toys from Joe Petto and dissecting them. Hmm… in a rather surprising twist, we learn that Noah was actually Sarah's old lover, and that he is Derek's real father. good on the movie for actually surprising me a little bit. Noah and Sarah have sex in the back of her station wagon. the sex scenes in this movie are surprisingly passionate. no gentle lovemaking here, these people are actually horny and gropey throughout. It's refreshing to see sex look like, well…sex. Anyway, Noah has been following Joe and Pino and trying to stop their killer toy reign of terror.

when our heroes confront Joe, we find that he's been knocked out, and the Joe we saw in the last few scenes was actually Pino wearing a robot face. yes, Virginia, Pino is a robot doll man with plastic hair and an interchangeable face. He's been a little glitchy, though, since the death of his mother, and has gone on a killing spree in order to free up mothers of their existing children in the hopes they'll marry Joe. makes sense in a way. There's a scene where Pino explains his evil plan to Sarah while he has her pinned down on a worktable. He spreads her legs and thrusts his gental-less hips against her, orgasmically moaning “I love you mommy!” For that brief moment, Silent Night, Deadly Night 5 becomes something grandly disgusting and truly weird. Eventually, the robot menace is destroyed, Derek learns to speak, and the new family goes home. “Who is that?” Derek asks about Noah. “We'll tell you when we get home,” mom replies. I guess blurting out “He's your real father!” would be crass.

Oh yeah, I nearly forgot: Clint Howard is in this film, too, also playing a character named Ricky. He's only in one scene as a backup department store Santa, but he is named Ricky. THE SAME RICKY? well, perhaps.

I kinda liked the fifth film, I guess. it did have a definite aesthetic, but wasn't nearly as weird as part 4. As a sequel to Initiation, it's fine, but as a fifth film, it's out of left field. mad robots and evil toy makers? what happened to killer Santa? A question for a generation.

SERIES OVERVIEW

Starting weak, peaking limply, and sauntering out on a high note, this is one of those rare series that almost seems to gain strength as it progresses. it has striking and ridiculous imagery, and, thanks to the “garbage day” sequence in part two, has even managed to become an internet meme. the later films may not be well known for their originality, but they are actually more striking than the first few.

As Christmas-themed horror films go, the first film is one of the more notable ones (even though it still falls behind Black Christmas), although, as I indicated last week, it’s residing somewhere in the middle ground between codified slasher and psychological horror. the series, though, lets go of the holidays pretty quick. when we have a Jewess fighting witches, we begin to wonder how Santa will come into play.

the main character of the series is clearly Ricky, and my theory is that he was killed in part 2, resurrected in a new body in part III, shunted into Clint Howard's body by witches in part 4, and eluded capture in part 5 to continue his reign of terror. one could easily round up Clint Howard today, make a part 6, and explain all of this explicitly. Heck, in a post-ironic era when every damned movie is being remade by lazy producers, and lazy audiences are passionlessly lapping it up, I think a cage-rattler like Silent Night, Deadly Night 6 would be ideal fodder. Don't remake the first. make a sixth.

Indeed, let's see if we can coin that axiom. Hey, Hollywood. Don't remake originals with a new “gritty” twist. just continue the series. Leave the roman numerals on. If Rob Zombie wants to make a version of Halloween, have some integrity, and bravely entitle your film Halloween IX. If he wants to continue, call it Halloween X. just let them accumulate. Let them be of a piece. after a while, you'll see you have an epic series on your hands, and there won't be horror purists like me whining about your crass re-writing of cinema history. in my mind, at least with horror sequels, cheaper can be better. keep 'em cheap, keep 'em gory, keep 'em fast, and keep 'em fun. Use real stage blood and hire actresses who are willing to disrobe gleefully. do we need to re-watch a new version of Friday the 13th with less lighting and more breast implants? the answer is no. but if you made a Friday the 13th part 11, I might be tempted. With that series, you shouldn't stop until part 13 anyway.

“Re-imagining” is the same as “not imagining.” Let's put Hollywood slasher banality back where it belongs: in the ever-increasing and ever-implausible serial number. Let's bring the charm back. 

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Bourns Adds 19 New Documents to its Successful PortNote® Solutions Series

Posted by jakeandtycho - December 2nd, 2011

RIVERSIDE, Calif., November 29, 2011 – Bourns, Inc., a leading manufacturer and supplier of electronic components, today announced that it has added 19 new PortNote® Solutions to assist designers in selecting the appropriate circuit protection solution for a specific port interface. These new documents add to the company’s successful series that provide engineers with a simplified design starting point that includes precise information on relevant compliance standards, the optimal Bourns solution with part numbers, an interface schematic and alternative solution references. These new documents cover port protection for audio/video, battery pack, data communication, LED and telecommunications designs, and are a useful resource to help streamline the circuit protection selection process for a specific port interface. In addition to the documentation, Bourns offers corresponding design kits for each of the new PortNote® Solutions.

“We have seen an overwhelmingly positive response in the marketplace to Bourns’ PortNote® Solutions series mostly due to how these documents can help customers reduce their circuit protection development time,” said Dr. Erik Meijer, vice president of circuit protection at Bourns. “Circuit protection products are often designed into variations of interface ports and Bourns is committed to helping OEMs select the right solution for this sometimes difficult task. This documentation series is another example of the resources we can offer our customers in addition to our extensive experience and broad offering of circuit protection solutions.”

The 19 new PortNote® Solutions offer protection information for LVDS input and output ports for audio/video applications; ESD protection for battery pack applications; Ethernet and RS-485 ports for datacom applications; PWM ports for LED applications and T1/E1 telephony, VDSL line side and VDSL over POTs for ports in telecom designs. The corresponding design kits contain sufficient Bourns® products to prototype five of the circuits designated in the PortNote® Solution. Bourns® PortNote® Solutions are not intended to replace detailed application notes or the customized solutions provided by Bourns’ FAE teams, but instead provide useful information in the circuit protection selection process for a specific port interface. A total of 30 individual Bourns® PortNote® Solutions are easily accessible on the Bourns website at: www.bourns.com/Library.aspx?name=PortNoteSolutions.

About Bourns
Bourns, Inc. is a leading manufacturer and supplier of automotive sensors, circuit protection solutions, magnetic products, microelectronic modules, trimming and precision potentiometers, panel controls and encoders and resistive products. Headquartered in Riverside, CA, Bourns serves a broad range of markets, including telecommunications, computer, industrial, instrumentation, automotive, consumer, non-critical life support medical, audio and various other market segments. Bourns® products are manufactured according to ISO-9000 standards under Six Sigma quality programs. Bourns® automotive products are manufactured in accordance with the TS16949 standard. Additional company and product information is available at the company’s website at www.bourns.com.


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Bourns and Magnachip Announce Volume Ramp of TBU® Series of High-Speed Circuit Protection Devices

Posted by jakeandtycho - September 28th, 2011

RIVERSIDE, California and SEOUL, South Korea, September 27, 2011 – MagnaChip Semiconductor Corporation (“MagnaChip”) (NYSE: MX), a Korea-based designer and manufacturer of analog and mixed-signal semiconductor products, and Bourns, Inc. (“Bourns”), a leading manufacturer and supplier of electronic components announced today that MagnaChip has ramped to mass production all families of the Bourns® series of  high-speed circuit protection devices (TBU® HSP) designed for a broad selection of Industrial, Consumer and Telecommunication applications.

TBU® HSP devices are constructed using MOSFET semiconductor technology.  When placed in series in the system, the TBU® HSP device monitors the current flowing through the line.  If the current exceeds a preset level, the TBU® HSP device triggers in less than 1µs, providing an effective barrier to large, destructive voltages or currents during surge events, thereby protecting sensitive electronics.  These devices are particularly popular in Telecommunication applications (such as Voice SLICs, xPON and GBEthernet), Industrial applications (such as RS485 interfaces, surveillance systems and avionics) and Consumer products applications (such as set top boxes and home gateways).

The TBU® HSP devices are custom designed and developed using Bourns’ proprietary technology fabricated by MagnaChip.  MagnaChip successfully transferred two proprietary processes of Bourns needed to produce the TBU® HSP devices by closely working with Bourns’ engineering team.  Both processes are currently in the production ramp phase.

TJ Lee, Senior Vice President and General Manager of MagnaChip’s Corporate and SMS Engineering, commented, “We are very pleased to have successfully transferred the Bourns processes to production. We also look forward to supporting their future engineering and manufacturing needs as a partner for our foundry services.”

Arnaud Moser, General Manager of Bourns’ Telecom Segment, added, “We are happy to celebrate this milestone with MagnaChip and look forward to a continued, successful partnership.  Thanks to MagnaChip’s engineering expertise and state of the art production facilities, Bourns has been able to bring this innovative technology to a broad array of customers across many markets.”

About MagnaChip
Headquartered in South Korea, MagnaChip Semiconductor is a Korea-based designer and manufacturer of analog and mixed-signal semiconductor products for high volume consumer applications. MagnaChip Semiconductor has one of the broadest and deepest range of analog and mixed-signal semiconductor platforms in the industry, supported by its 30-year operating history, a large portfolio of registered and pending patents, and extensive engineering and manufacturing process expertise. For more information, please visit http://www.magnachip.com/.

About Bourns
Bourns is a leading manufacturer and supplier of automotive sensors, circuit protection solutions, magnetic products, microelectronic modules, trimming and precision potentiometers, panel controls and encoders and resistive products.  Headquartered in Riverside, California, USA, Bourns serves a broad range of markets, including telecommunications, computer, industrial, instrumentation, automotive, consumer, non-critical life support medical, audio and various other market segments.  Bourns® products are manufactured according to ISO-9000 standards under Six Sigma quality programs.  Bourns® automotive products are manufactured in accordance with the TS16949 standard.  Additional company and product information is available at the Bourns website http://www.bourns.com/.

Press Contacts
MagnaChip

In the United States:

Robert Pursel

Director of Investor Relations

(408) 625-1262

robert.pursel@magnachip.com

In Korea:

Chankeun Park

Senior Manager, Public Relations

+82-2-6903-3195

chankeun.park@magnachip.com

Bourns

Agency Contact:

Annette Keller

Keller Communication

(949) 640-4811

annettekeller@sbcglobal.net

Company Contact:

Mikelyn Bridges

Bourns, Inc.

(951) 781-5397

mike.bridges@bourns.com

Bourns®, TBU® and the Bourns logo are registered trademarks of Bourns, Inc. and may be used only with the permission of Bourns and proper acknowledgement.  Other listed names and brands are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.


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Electronic waveform of newly-increased aviation of the Aeroflex S series signal generator

Posted by jakeandtycho - June 30th, 2011

Aeroflex famous for offering the aviation electronic industry standardized product usually, increases popular functions to it in its new signal generator series

Following the step of the electronic signal generator of 2030 canonial serial aviation of Aeroflex industry, Aeroflex holding company ( New York Stock Exchange: ARX) Wholly-owned constituent company Aeroflex limited company under command announced a few days ago: Use the waveform for its newly-increased quite popular aviation electronic test of S series signal generator. All aviation electronic the responsible institution ‘ Civil or military) Airport, aircraft fuselage manufacturer, plane system manufacturer and military subcontractor all test the important navigation feature with dedicated signal generator of the avionic equipment.

The newly-increased Aeroflex SGA simulation signal generator with option 6 tests the built-in undulate generator that various aviation electronic functions are required. The waveform that this new option includes can be used for testing the instrument landing system (ILS) , very high frequency omnirange (VOR) , marker beacon, and COM ID sound signal used for discerning at the airport. The parameter of the electronic signal of aviation reveals with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Model forms stipulated are compatible.

SGA with option 6 has offered an ideal single machine instrument solution used for testing electronic receiver and airport alarm monitor of aviation. The modulation waveform turned into in digitization can guarantee to possess remarkable reliability and stable characteristic under all operating conditions.

Instrument landing system (ILS) Lead the plane to enter the runway by receiving the highly rigorous signal. If the plane can be flown over high or overlow, either overly take back or take over, ILS will be pointed out to the pilot, so as to ensure the plane keeps a course of safty landing. Very high frequency omnirange (VOR) Used and navigated in the flight way on the plane, it is displayable to go or come from the position of fixed beacon station on the ground, the marker beacon can point out the plane in the terminal distance from the runway to the pilot. The electronic test of aviation needs a kind of signal generator with remarkable integrated ability of modularization, in order to test on-board navigation receiver and alarm monitor unit.

electronics-tech.com

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Telecast Copperhead Supports Critical Analysis During World Series Broadcasts

Posted by jakeandtycho - September 12th, 2010

The dominating performance of San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Tim Lincecum in wrapping up the 2010 Major League Baseball World Series on Monday night was one of the best by a pitcher ever. And fans at home saw all 10 of his strikeouts in ultra slow motion, thanks to the X-MO camera coupled with the newest version of our Copperhead transceiver.

Inertia Unlimited, a veteran production company in Jacksonville, Vermont that works with Fox Sports, has devised a new way to use the Copperhead 3400 fiber optic video transceiver —which was originally designed for 3-D production because it pairs two 1.5 Gbps-compatible Copperheads together—by mounting it on a specially modified Phantom HD high-speed camera, known as the X-MO slow-motion system.

When used in tandem with the Copperhead 3400, the X-MO worked so well—converting baseband video signals to light in order to send the signals over 500 feet—that Inertia Unlimited president Jeff Silverman said he’s including it in all of his specialty camera systems going forward.

CopperHead on X-Mo camera

The X-MO system consists of a modified Vision Research Phantom HD high-speed camera with a Telecast Copperhead 3400 transceiver mounted on the back.

“The slow-motion system that we use is capable of much higher frame rates than any other traditional slomo camera system,” Silverman said. “The system we used for the World Series was capable of running at 5,600 fps, so the quality is so much better. And because it worked so flawlessly, Telecast’s technology will be a staple of all of the systems we provide in the future.”

The X-MO camera was located in a small compartment shooting over the center field wall and pointing directly at home plate (called the “tight center” angle) in both AT&T Park, in San Francisco—home of the new World Champion San Francisco Giants, and inside Rangers Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The unique point of view showed the ball slowly coming from the pitcher’s hand and into the catcher’s glove, allowing fans to see where the pitch landed. The effect was controlled with EVS SloMo playback controllers on board an NCP Productions HD truck in San Francisco and on board the Game Creek Video “Dynasty” truck on site in Texas. [These and other production companies provided feeds for Fox Sports domestic, an international feed for European broadcasters as well as a separate feed for Japanese audiences.]

Silverman said the Copperhead is ideal because it reduces the amount of cabling required while providing the extra bandwidth needed to transmit two simultaneously 3 Gbps streams and a third 1.5 Gbps stream directly out of the extremely high-speed camera. This massive amount of data was stored in solid-state memory inside the camera and then sent back to the truck for playback via Ethernet connectivity. Providing the slow-motion feed and a regular (60 fps) HD feed back to the production trucks on site (where it was remotely controlled along with 30 other HD cameras) was critical to the live coverage and served as a great addition to the live HD broadcast for viewers.

During the five games of this year’s World Series the X-MO system was used to shoot a live 720p HD stream, in addition to simultaneously recording two streams at 300 fps.

Jim Hurwitz at World Series

Here I am on site in San Francisco with a Copperhead 3400 on the X-MO system during 2010 World Series.

The Copperhead 3400 has proven to be perfect for high-speed acquisition (using a camera originally designed for manufacturing applications) during live events. Leveraging the Vision Research camera, the resulting scenes are captured at speeds from 30 – 5.600 fps and then played back at 60 fps to create stunning super slow motion effects for enhanced viewer analysis.

“We asked Telecast for a solution that would give us the data throughput we needed and the Copperhead 3400 is exactly what we were looking for,” Silverman said. “Telecast really came through for us.”

Inertia Unlimited also used its X-MOS system during the American League Championship Series, complete with a Telecast Fiber Systems Copperhead 3400 transceiver.

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Dayva 65 X 10 Ft Huntington Series Umbrella

Posted by jakeandtycho - August 24th, 2010

Dress up your Dayva 6.5 x 10 ft. Huntington Series Umbrella and recover your umbrella with a different cover. choose from different colors to style your umbrella and backyard. These recovers are made with a Sunbrella fabric which will stand up to sun rain wind and color wont wash out. These Sunbrella fabrics also include a three year Manufacturer Warranty. about Dayva International theres always something new at Dayva is the companys theme for this new millenium. Incorporated in November 1983 Dayva has grown rapidly into a leading worldwide supplier of market umbrellas umbrella lighting protective outdoor furniture covers patio heaters indooroutdoor wood furniture and decorative outdoor accessories. with extensive experience with retailers from single store operations to national chains Dayvas reputation for high quality products at reasonable prices combined with outstanding service remains unchallenged. Dayvas philosophy of Promoting Integrity and Creating a World where everyone Wins continues to be the thread that weaves its ongoing success. In the past year Dayva has aggressively and pain-stakingly taken a huge leap forward. Dayva has acquired new properties and doubled its warehouse and office capacity on both coasts installed a new state-of-the-art computer system from the ground up and taken on additional personnel in every corner of the business to properly manage the added volume. Dayva is ready for this millennium. All Dayva ships FREE and FAST. Dayva has grown rapidly into a leading worldwide supplier of market umbrellas umbrella lighting protective outdoor furniture covers patio heaters indooroutdoor wood furniture and decorative outdoor accessories. we have the full line available. we offer great prices and great service. If you have questions or want to discuss prices CALL US. Warranty Information Dayva Protective Covers have a one 1 year limited warranty. Dayva warrants our protective covers of manufacturers defects visible at time of purchase. The warranty also covers the material against cracking or disintegrating for a period of one 1 year from date of retail sale.

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Bourns Expands the Series of Useful Design Documentation on Port Interface Circuit Protection

Posted by jakeandtycho - May 19th, 2010

Bourns Expands PortNote™ Selection

Bourns Expands PortNote™ Selection
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RIVERSIDE, Calif., March 29, 2011 – Bourns, Inc., a leading manufacturer and supplier of electronic components, today announced that it has developed seven new PortNote™ Solutions to assist designers in selecting the appropriate circuit protection solution for a specific port interface. Bourns® PortNote™ Solutions are a series of one-page documents that provide concise information on relevant compliance standards, Bourns solutions and part numbers, the specific interface schematic and alternative solution references. The new documents also feature application-based tools for audio/video and data communication and telecommunications designs, and are a useful resource to help streamline the circuit protection selection process for a specific port interface.

“Selecting the right circuit protection solution for a particular port interface can be time consuming and daunting,” said Dr. Erik Meijer, vice president of circuit protection at Bourns. “With our extensive circuit protection knowledge, Bourns is committed to helping our customers reduce their development time. Because our unique PortNote™ Solutions documentation has been positively received, we have chosen to add seven more popular port solutions to this successful series.”  Easily accessible on the Bourns website, the seven new PortNote™ Solutions cover Ethernet and RS-485 ports for datacom applications; LVDS input and output ports for audio/video applications and T1/E1 telephony, VDSL line side and VDSL over POTs for ports in telecom designs. In addition, Bourns offers corresponding design kits. Each design kit contains sufficient Bourns® products to build five of the circuits offered in the PortNote™ Solution. Bourns® PortNote™ Solutions are not intended to replace detailed application notes or the customized solutions provided by Bourns’ FAE teams, but instead provide useful information in the circuit protection selection process for a specific port interface. A total of 22 individual Bourns® PortNote™ Solutions including the corresponding design kits can be viewed on the Bourns website at www.bourns.com/Library.aspx?name=PortNoteSolutions.

About Bourns
Bourns, Inc. is a leading manufacturer and supplier of automotive sensors, circuit protection solutions, magnetic products, microelectronic modules, trimming and precision potentiometers, panel controls and encoders and resistive products. Headquartered in Riverside, CA, Bourns serves a broad range of markets, including telecommunications, computer, industrial, instrumentation, automotive, consumer, non-critical life support medical, audio and various other market segments. Bourns® products are manufactured according to ISO-9000 standards under Six Sigma quality programs. Bourns® automotive products are manufactured in accordance with the TS16949 standard. Additional company and product information is available at the company’s website at www.bourns.com.

Bourns® and the Bourns logo are registered trademarks of Bourns, Inc. and may be used only with the permission of Bourns and proper acknowledgement. Other listed names and brands are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.


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