Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
<<June 2024>>
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
      01
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: drones, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. SDCC ’15: Comic-Con bans drones and selfie sticks, and other changes, new venues, food trucks etc.

toucan_cci2015_campusmap.jpg

Two weeks out from Comic-Con (that’s next week) is generally what we call “Hell Week” as all the details get locked down, programming goes out, meetings get set, dinners take shape and so on. But we’re beginning to get a picture of what’s new this year. And one thing that wont be new is selfie sticks on the con floor. The Con has updated its Tech rules to keep pace with the times, and selfie sticks, live streaming from panels, e-cigs and more are all prohibited:

No Selfie Sticks or Similar Devices at Comic-Con
We know you want that perfect photo of yourself and the gang at Comic-Con and your arms just aren’t long enough, but please be aware that selfie sticks, GoPro poles, or any device that extends your camera or phone away from your hand, are not allowed at Comic-Con. With so many people in attendance, protruding cameras or phones sticking up in the air are a definite hazard. If you’re caught with a selfie stick, you will be asked by security to put it away and not use it at Comic-Con. This includes all of the Convention Center: Exhibit Hall, Programming and Event rooms, etc., and on Convention Center grounds outside, and any official Comic-Con events outside the Center, including the Marriott Marquis, Manchester Grand Hyatt, Hilton San Diego Bayfront, and Omni San Diego hotels, the Horton Grand Theatre, and the San Diego Central Library.

As one wag in a blog post put it, can a selfie stick really be any more hazardous than giant wings on a cosplayer, but I’d rather duck around a show-off with a great costume than a narcissist with a phone—also selfie sticks are used to get “upskirts,” another reason to ban them. According to the post, drones are also banned, a wise preemptive strike against preemptive strikes.

Marriott-Hall_San-Diego_Carousel.jpg

There’s a lot more news on the Toucan blog, including this post on changes to the local scene. I can’t believe Torsten missed this, but an entire venue has been torn down:

One thing that has gone away: Marriott Hall. That venerable programming venue, which hosted Anime and Film Festival screenings and the Fulfillment Room for the past few years, has been torn down by the Marriott Marquis and Marina Hotel to make room for a bigger and better convention facility, which is still under construction. Because of that, some changes have been made to locations for various ongoing Comic-Con programs and events.

Anime screenings have been moved back to the convention center and fullfillment to the Hyatt.

I can’t say that I’ve ever been to Marriott Hall but I guess it was located between the Marriott and the Hyatt parking garage. This area is actually being updated to include a whole new 171,000 sq ft meeting facility! Designed and constructed at a cost of some $70 million, I guess this shows that private enterprise is the way to go on the shores of San Diego harbor. The new area will include:

• The demolition of the existing Marriott Hall ballroom and the removal of 403 parking spots;
• The construction of a new and expanded Marriott Hall with ballroom and exhibit hall space;
• The construction of an outdoor event area, known as Marina Terrace
• The addition of public access corridor improvements, known as Marina Walk, that would be located between the Marriott and the adjacent Manchester Grand Hyatt;
• The relocation of two existing mechanical cooling towers and the addition of two new cooling towers.
The project does not involve an increase in the number of hotel rooms or any in-water work at the Marriott Marina.




Artists rendition above. Torsten, get planning now.

This post also mentions The Quartyard, an area located to the northeast of Petco (Where all the new stuff seems to be happening) described as “an Urban Park constructed from repurposed shipping containers in the East Village Neighborhood of Downtown San Diego.” This area houses a coffee shop and food trucks! The food truck where I got my life-changing breakfast burrito no longer exists, alas, but I’m still burrito bound.

The CCI folks have also released a map of the expanded “campus” for 2015, which includes the usual core hotels. Programming at the Horton Grand Theater has been continued, and playback of Hall H panels has been moved to the Omni. In addition, the San Diego Central Library will be a hub of activity this year, with the addition ogfthe Art of Comic-Con exhibit and more:

Educational programs (Shiley Events Suite, 9th floor); Podcasts and Web Series programs (Neil Morgan Auditorium, ground level); Art of Comic-Con Gallery Exhibition (Gallery, 9th floor). The official address for the Central Library is 330 Park Blvd., however for the Auditorium, it’s better to enter off of 11th Ave., by K St.

Here’s a detailed map of the venues, which are spread out quite a bit this year by con standards, so wear comfortable shoes.

Do any of locals have any other tips and hints for this year? Ideas for where to get a breakfast burrito? Memories of Marriott Hall? Let us know below!

3 Comments on SDCC ’15: Comic-Con bans drones and selfie sticks, and other changes, new venues, food trucks etc., last added: 6/19/2015
Display Comments Add a Comment
2. Video Sunday: “I’m a Reno Sweeney bunny!”

There was a time when I worked in the main branch of NYPL with the big old stone lions out front.  No longer.  These days I work at BookOps, a dual entity that encompasses both NYPL and Brooklyn Public  Library.  And in my workplace there is a great and grand and massively impressive sorting machine.  It’s very Charlie and the Chocolate Factory-esque.  I give tours of it all the time.  It sorts and assigns all the holds and returns of the system, so you know it’s gotta be cool.  Now, thanks to drone technology, you get to see not just where I work (visually stunning this part of Long Island City is not) but the kickin’ sorting machine as well.  Feast your eyes!!

Flying Around Book Ops from Nate Bolt on Vimeo.

Speaking of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, I kinda like it when Al Roker gets pissed off. Makes for better TV watching. And besides, the man has a point.

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Thanks to Travis Jonker for the heads up!

In 1996 a bunch of Monty Python guys made The Wind in the Willows.  It gets better.  Steve Coogan was Mole.  Stephen Fry was The Judge.  This is not to be confused with a very similar looking version starring Matt James in 2006, of course.  Still I’m quite shocked I hadn’t seen it until now.  Fortunately there is such a thing as YouTube.  Here’s part one:

WindInWillows 500x289 Video Sunday: Im a Reno Sweeney bunny!

Thanks to Tom Angleberger for the link.

I sort of adore kids.  Allie Bruce at Bank Street was kind enough to show a bunch of them rewriting Battle Bunny / The Birthday Bunny (a book born to be taken and adapted) in their own unique visions.

They do love their poop.

Man.  It’s a bummer when someone popular online has your name.  It’s even more of a bummer when they’ve rabid fan bases.  Meghan McCarthy created a short film to separate her from the other Meghan McCarthys.  Can you blame her?

For the record, the only Betsy Birds I know of out there are an Arizona artist and a Muppet.  The day I beat that Muppet in Google search results was a happy one indeed.

And for our final off-topic video.  This one’s almost on-topic  Remember the film Hook?  With its Peter Pan link?  And the character of Rufio?  Well I can’t say this any better than i09 did, so I’ll just quote them verbatim: “Baby Rufio Cosplay Validates The Entire Concept Of Procreation”.

Rufio 500x279 Video Sunday: Im a Reno Sweeney bunny!

 

share save 171 16 Video Sunday: Im a Reno Sweeney bunny!

1 Comments on Video Sunday: “I’m a Reno Sweeney bunny!”, last added: 8/10/2014
Display Comments Add a Comment
3. The B List

The alphabet marches on and we have arrived at “B” week. Naturally, there are many words needing our attention this week--bugs, butterflies, babies, bananas--but one is a can’t miss: bees. It’s particularly handy for teaching the letter, being exactly the same and all, but I have a complicated relationship with bees. I really love honey, but have done the whole honey-retrieval process, including suiting up and puffing out eye-stinging smoke, and would never eat honey if that was the only way I could get it. I am a hard-core pacifist, but experience an almost delirious joy at the idea that a bee I’ve just been stung by has ripped its own guts out and will soon die. I can get on board with the queen concept--giving proper credit to those who actually do the work of procreating is an idea humans could learn from--but feel a little uncomfortable with the drone situation for personal reasons (even though I know they are all boys). What to do? Of course, I may be overthinking things in light of the fact that we’re talking about stories for toddlers, but any two year-old who knows the words to both Queen’s “We Will Rock You” and Elvis’ “Fools Rush In” is obviously picking up messages we don’t even know we’re sending. Regardless of my relationship status with the bee folk, they are fascinating. In Elizabeth Winchester’s Bees!, we learned that one beehive houses 70,000 bees. That’s how many people go to the Superbowl. Who knew?

http://www.amazon.com/Time-Kids-Bees-Editors/dp/0060576421

http://www.amazon.com/Elizabeth-Winchester/e/B001IR1C6K

0 Comments on The B List as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment