Thursday, December 7, 2017

Stranger Things: what can we expect from season three?

Netflix has confirmed that their blockbuster show will return for a third season, teasing more monsters, high school drama and even stranger things

If Stranger Things had ended after its second season we might almost have forgiven the powers-that-be at Netflix. For after all the horrors of the last nine episodes, as the malignant entities of the Upside Down once again invaded the small town of Hawkins, Indiana, that perfect series finale left us with a welcome sense of festive joy and hopefulness for the future of our lovable teenage gang of amateur supernatural investigators.

Not for long, though. For Netflix last week announced that the Duffer brothers Emmy-winning paean to 1980s Stephen King will be back for another year at least. So what should we be expecting from season three?

More brother and sister reunions for Eleven

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Photograph: Courtesy Netflix

If Milly Bobbie Browns Eleven was logically named, there ought to be at least another nine children out there who were experimented upon as part of the nefarious Dr Martin Brenners evil MKUltra program, and they might all have different powers. Season two introduced us to Linnea Berthelsens Kali, AKA Eight, who is able to manipulate other peoples perceptions, and we already know that Eleven has remarkable telekinetic and psychokinetic abilities. She can eavesdrop on targets in other parts of the world namely Russians and manipulate huge objects vans, giant, multi-limbed smoke monsters using only the power of her mind.

The question is not just what happened to the other nine MKUltra subjects, but also who they have become. It stands to reason that Matthew Modines Brenner might have had more success with some of his earlier victims than he did with his later subjects. Could there be a docile, evil version of Eleven out there somewhere, ready to work on the side of the doctor and his sinister cohorts?

New creatures from the Upside Down

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Photograph: Courtesy Netflix/Netflix

We now know that there are at least three types of monster who have escaped from an alternate dimension into the Upside Down version of Hawkins, and from there occasionally into the real-world version of the town itself. Season ones Demigorgon was joined by the apparently sentient Mind Flayer and several demonic Demo-Dogs in season two. So what can we expect next?

Its a little known fact that both the Mind Flayer and Demigorgon were named after monsters from 1980s Dungeons and Dragons. The former was described as a (presumably much-smaller) octopus-like creature that fastens itself to humanoid subjects, eats their still-living brains and takes over their remaining limbs, while the latter was a two-headed demon prince.

If the Duffer Brothers are leafing throughout the pages of old RPG looking for freaky creatures to riff off, we can perhaps expect to meet monsters like the Flail Snail (sporting spiked balls on its eye stalks, but you know still pretty slow and easy to run away from), or the dreaded Atropal (ahem the stillborn foetus of a god) in season three. Or maybe just give us some dark elves.

The return of Martin Brenner

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Photograph: Courtesy Netflix/Netflix

Absent for most of season two after being attacked by the Demigorgon at the end of season one, the mad scientist needs to return to Hawkins to help explain to us exactly what happened during his hideous experiments in the 1970s. We know he might still be alive, thanks to the information provided by former Hawkins lab worker Ray Carroll in season two.

We need to know, for a start, who Elevens father is and whether shes actually related to the other MKUltra subjects. Its possible that Brenner himself might have impregnated Elevens mother Terry Ives while she was trapped in Hawkins Lab the young psychic did call him Papa during early episodes of season one. But its just as likely that Brenner is the only one out there who knows the true identity of our heros last remaining fully lucid parent.

Some sweet relief for poor Will already

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Photograph: Courtesy Netflix/Netflix

Noah Schnapps Will Byers may have escaped the fate of his literary forebear, Kings unfortunate little Georgie Denbrough in It, but hes surely suffered enough from the attentions of the Upside Downs grim denizens that its clearly time for someone else to take the strain. Besides, were fed up with seeing Winona Ryder heroically forced to find different ways to look anguished and pallid as his mom, Joyce. At the tail end of season two, it became clear that both David Harbours Jim Hopper and Gaten Matarazzos ever-ebullient Dustin Henderson have most probably been infected with material from the freakish netherworld, so perhaps its time for the Mind Flayer to start messing with them instead.

Billy Hargroves continuing adventures in heavy metal haircut hubris

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Photograph: Courtesy Netflix/Netflix

Not since Bill Paxtons Chet in Weird Science has there been such a fabulous figure of unreconstructed alpha male jockishness as Dacre Montgomerys Billy, the ornately mulleted, appallingly racist new kid on the block at Hawkins high school who drove all before him in season two before coming up against an even bigger jerk his own violent bully of a father. Now that we know why Billy behaves the way he does, it would be fascinating to see if he is able to evolve from bully-boy 80s rock star wannabe into something more multilayered in season three, just as Joe Keerys Steve Harringon eventually managed to find his way in season two after a rocky beginning on the show. And if he cant, well, an excruciating death in the jaws of something abhorrent from the Upside Down will do just as nicely.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2017/dec/05/what-can-we-expect-in-season-three-of-stranger-things

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Amazon just launched a $249 camera with AI smarts

Amazon's DeepLens camera for developers.
Image: amazon

Amazon wants to make it much easier for developers to use its image recognition capabilities.

Amazon Web Services just introduced a new $249 camera with computer vision and AI-smarts baked right in. Called DeepLens, the camera is intended for developers who want to learn to build applications that leverage Amazon's artificial intelligence technology.

The camera is available for pre-order now and will ship next year, the company says.

It's a boxy device that's obviously designed with the AI tech in mind rather than looks or pure specs. The 4MP camera shoots 1080p HD video and is equipped with Wi-Fi, a micro SD slot, and 8 GB of memory. 

The real reason developers will want the camera, of course, is for its AI tech. Built in are a set of pre-trained image recognition models that developers can use to create their own applications.

"These models will help you detect cats and dogs, faces, a wide array of household and everyday objects, motions and actions, and even hot dogs," Amazon's Jeff Barr writes in a blog post. "We will continue to train these models, making them better and better over time."

That means a developer who wants to build an application for, say, detecting household objects, can get started without having to train a set of algorithms from scratch - a time-consuming and often expensive task.

This stands to greatly reduce the barrier to entry for developers who want to work with artificial intelligence technology but may not have the resources on their own.

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Read more: http://mashable.com/2017/11/29/amazon-deeplens-ai-camera-for-developers/