![]() The Great Hack could be another bleak episode of Netflix’s techno-dystopian horror series Black Mirror. Jenna Sutela's solo debut attempts to channel a 19th century medium to the Martians through computerised divination. Techworld speaks with the influential author here. Jeanette Winterson’s latest novel leaves readers wondering if they should be inspired by or fear the latest developments in the world of AI. Techworld speaks with directors Pella Kågerman and Hugo Lilja to learn more. Does the growing influence of algorithms in filmmaking challenge human creativity? An interview with the directors of AniaraĪ film based on the cold war sci-fi classic by Swedish Nobel laureate Harry Martinson, about a spaceship of refugees fleeing a doomed earth, holds up a bleak mirror to the way world events seems to be headed. Researchers from Sungkyunkwan University in South Korea can predict a film's success by applying deep learning models to its plot summaries. Researchers use AI to predict a film's success So it is little wonder that after the strong showing from last year, another tranche of films at the BFI's London Film Festival have science and technology as central themes, along with the related mystery, fatigue, and ethics that many of us are only just beginning to grapple with. Technology seems to mediate everything we do, consume, and are. See also: Sony's European Design Centre director Philip Rose talks us through the chaos of the firm's sensor-driven double pendulum installation. We interview Sam Jacob of Sam Jacob Studio to learn more. ![]() Sea Things by Sam Jacob StudioĪs part of London Design Festival 2019, software company SAP has commissioned an installation at the V&A to raise awareness around the issue of ocean plastics. This year at the BFI's annual London Film Festival, a selection of short films focus on the disruption – in the parlance of the technology entrepreneurs spurning it along – of the fabric of everything. Shorts at BFI's London Film Festival 2019 Interactive Filmmaking Lab adds immersion to moviesĭr Polina Zioga explains how Brain-Computer Interfaces can enable our thoughts to interact with films as we watch them.
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