It may not seem like anything worth caring about to most people,we sell dry cabinet
and different kind of laboratory equipment in us. really: Cinemax has
renewed its new show Banshee for a second season, after three episodes.
It's just some random show on Cinemax, that cheesy porn-lite channel,
right? Wrong! With the renewal of this new series — a gritty, gory, only
kinda sorta corny crime show about depraved small-town America —
Cinemax is working to assure a position as a true network of original
programming. It's an oddly exciting and mostly unheralded development
that speaks to the ever-deepening and refreshing pool of available
television.
Look, Cinemax's three big shows right now aren't
going to win many awards — ones that aren't for stunt work, anyway. And
that's... OK. The goods are great fun nonetheless. The network's first
show, Strike Back, a co-production with British broadcaster Sky, is a
T&A action riot that eschews geopolitical nuance for guns-blazing
bravado and is all the more enjoyable for it. Its attitude toward pesky
things like extreme civilian collateral damage would be deplorable if it
was the real world, but it's not, so who really cares? Not caring too
much about the actual nuts and bolts of global intelligence, the show is
international fun — last season told an unexpectedly complex story of
nuclear armament and nation-building in Africa. And, rather
surprisingly, the great Charles Dance showed up to play the season's
main villain, giving it enough gusto to override most of the too-easy
plot contrivances. All the neat explosions took care of the rest.Solar
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Hunted,
another British co-production (this time with the BBC), is a subtler
and decidedly smarter affair, a domestic spy drama about a wronged
superagent (Melissa George) seeking undercover revenge. Its first season
had more satisfyingly knotty mythology than Homeland, but blessedly
didn't take itself so damn seriously. Sure, George's Sam Hunter (get the
title now?) may be the worst spy ever — breaking into the bad guy's
office in broad daylight while he's in the other room is maybe not the
best idea! — but she's an intriguing central figure nonetheless. George
was supported ably by the likes of Stephen Dillane and confirmed
dreamboat Adam Rayner, playing shadowy colleagues/potential foes of
Sam's with lots of pleasing modulation and mystery. The first season
ended with a wonderful twist, something we couldn't see coming miles
away, like, say Abu Nazir's wicked master plan.Australian business
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and laser cutting machines. Classier than Strike Back but no less
viscerally engaging, Hunted was an unexpected highlight of the late-2012
TV season. We were sad to hear that the BBC has dropped its partnership
with the show and that Hunted's second season will likely look very
different because of it, but at least creator Frank Spotnitz and his
star are still aboard.
And then there's Banshee, which is
definitely the weirdest of the three series. Set in rural-ish
Pennsylvania, the show focuses on an ex-con who turns up in the titular
town to find his long-lost lady love, only to wind up becoming the
sheriff by way of a deadly fight and a case of mistaken identity. He
squares off against the de facto town leader, a sinister fellow with
evil henchmen and ties to the Amish community. At just three episodes
in, Banshee is already an engaging potboiler, at turns silly and kinda
sexy. It's Cinemax's first purely native show, and it indicates good
things for the future. That future includes another action series,
called Sandbox, and, supposedly, a TV version of the Transporter films.
So, Cinemax knows its brand. It's action with a dash of wit, plus just
enough oddity to keep it original. It's FX to HBO's AMC.
Cinemax
is lucky to be owned by HBO — they don't have to compete with their
polished, prestige-ified big brother. Unlike Showtime, Cinemax does not
seem burdened with aspirations of grandeur; they can roll around in the
muck and grunt all they want. This is not, for time being anyway, a
network that's trying to win any Peabodys. That's a nice change of pace
for non-HBO premium cable. Hopefully the dribbles of praise they've been
getting of late won't go to their heads. I like the network muscly and
goofy; swagger and sweat become it, and too much glossiness wouldn't. I
like also what Cinemax's recent intriguing developments suggest about
another evolution of the television landscape. They're now succeeding
where Starz largely stumbled and failed. So maybe we're truly ready for
another round of new offerings. And, lo, here comes House of Cards on
Netflix, as well as the rebooted, slimmed-down Arrested Development.
And, further off, there will be whatever Amazon Studios turns into.
Hopefully expectations can be managed on these new platforms and they'll
succeed at courting a niche audience rather than flailing after wider
appeal.
Radical advances in military science sometimes arrive
from far afield. Take Kevlar, invented to reinforce radial tires years
before it saw use in body armor and helmets. Similarly, the ScanEagle
unmanned aircraft, one of the most popular military spy drones, arose
from technology created to help fishing fleets find schools of tuna.
Now,
a brewing legal war over the fish-finder-turned-weapon has opened a
window on a rarely examined side of military contracting: ideas and
intellectual property. How do you untangle who really owns the
technology the U.S. government buys and deploys in battle?
A
swept-wing UAV with a 10-foot wingspan, ScanEagle has become an ISR
workhorse,Don't make another silicone mold without these invaluable Mold Making
supplies and accessories! deployed everywhere from Iraq to Somalia. Its
manufacturer, Insitu, had $400 million in sales last year. Iran in
December claimed to have captured one. And in fact, this fall, as
tensions with Iran ratcheted higher, the Navy awarded another contract
to Insitu to deploy, fly and maintain two more ScanEagle systems from
warships in the Persian Gulf. It’s a drop in the bucket in the steady
stream of contracts for the system.
Among the features that make
the drone well-suited to deployment from a ship’s flight deck or a
small combat outpost is its ability to land without a runway. Crews
connect a taut cable to a vertical boom, then fly the little airplane so
it snags the cable with a hook on its wing. They recover it easily,
sliding it off the cable like a fish from a line.
That simple,
ingenious feature, which Insitu calls SkyHook, is at the center of a
legal war far from the conflict zone, in federal courts in Missouri and
Washington, D.C. The stakes could be several hundred million dollars;
the combatants bear familiar names.
On the one side of the legal
struggle: an inventor who is a member of a defense-contracting dynasty.
His name is William “Randy” McDonnell — as in McDonnell Douglas. He
says he came up with the Skyhook landing system and that he is owed,Find
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anywhere. big-time, for its use in ScanEagle. The lawsuits were filed
under the name of McDonnell’s company, Advanced Aerospace Technologies
Inc.
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