Monday, February 6, 2012

The GREY movie spoiler

I am back in my blog from 99 to 719 ranking?WTF?
BTW i love movies so i had to start my blog with a movie spoiler of some sort..
I`ve watch this movie and its a good one. Ending is what you expected, unpredictable movie i should say.
Here is the some short spoiler of it..

Northernmost Alaska. Ottway (Liam Neeson) is a for-hire security hunter/marksman under the employ of an Alaskan drilling operation. His job is to protect the "ex-cons, fugitives and assholes" from the area's indigenous carnivores: bears & wolves. In one instance Ottway spots a grey blur on the horizon. He draws the rifle from his shoulder bag, follows the blur as it nears a trio of workers working on a pipe, and fires. The wolf slumps on the ground and Ottway puts his hands on it's still breathing chest. He feels it's life slip away. Ottway daydreams of his wife (Anne Openshaw); they both lay on a bed with white sheets facing each other, smiling. He writes a letter to his estranged wife, summing up his depression. One night after his shift, in the drilling operation's tavern, Ottway grows sick of the rowdy patrons. He walks outside, pulls out his rifle and sticks the barrel in his mouth. As he is about to pull the trigger, numerous wolf calls echo in the distance. He takes the barrel out of his mouth.

Ottway and many other crewman from the drilling operation board a commuter jet bound for Anchorage, being de-iced on a runway. Ottway stores his rifle in the overhead bin, takes his seat, and closes his eyes. Another grunt, named Flannery (Joe Anderson), wakens Ottway and annoys him with questions about his sex-life. Ottway tells Flannery to either shut up or move. Flannery exits the row and finds a seat elsewhere. As Ottway sleeps the other travelers are disturbed by the turbulent flight. Flannery annoys the others by telling horror stories about airplane crash victims. The plane is rocked by massive turbulence. Ottway awakens; he sees sparks erupting from the cockpit and watches the ground grow larger in his window. He lays himself flat across his row and buckles himself in. He watches the hull tear away.

Ottway lays on the same white bed as before, and stares at his wife. They're covered by a billowy sheet. Ottway awakens in a desolate, snow-covered field, alone. He gets to his feet, surveys his surroundings, and runs in the direction of smoke. Beyond a bluff lies the wreckage of the plane. He scrambles down to the crash-site and happens upon Flannery, injured and pinned under his seat. Ottway helps him up, doing his best to distract him from his bisected seat-mate. Ottway makes his way inside the fuselage where he finds a half dozen survivors. One of them, Lewenden (James Badge Dale) is spurting blood from his abdomen. Hendrick (Dallas Roberts) comforts Lewenden, telling him that he'll pull through. Ottway takes one look at Lewenden and tells him as tactfully as he can that he will succumb to his wounds; that death will feel like a warm blanket that slowly overtakes him, and to accept it while thinking about his daughter. Lewenden slowly passes, to the shock of the survivors around him.

7 SURVIVORS

Ottway takes a headcount of the survivors: Hendrick, Diaz (Frank Grillo), Talget (Dermot Mulroney), Burke (Nonso Anozie), Flannery, Hernandez (Ben Bray), and himself. Most of the survivors prove to be willing to follow Ottway's advice, since he is a professional survivalist, but Diaz is the lone dissenter. Diaz finds the corpse of one of his superiors. He steals his watch, which he claims to have a GPS beacon, and is about to steal the man's expensive wallet before Ottway stops him. Diaz throws the wallet in Ottway's face and returns to the fuselage. Ottway walks past the rear portion of the fuselage and sees movement within. He excitedly calls for the others to come help, but is swiftly taken off his feet by a pair of grey timberwolves. He punches the two wolves, who gnaw at his arms and legs, and is saved by Talget and Hernandez who scare off the wolves. The survivors listen to the howling of the wolves that have surrounded the crash site. Ottway carries a torch to the perimeter of the fuselage and shines light on a dozens wolves that have them surrounded. One-by-one the wolves back away. Ottway theorizes that they are either in the wolves' territory or the wolves are simply passing through. He hopes for the latter, and prays that they aren't anywhere near a den. Ottway tells them that someone will need to stay up and keep watch; they will all take two hour shifts. Ottway takes guard duty first, and is soon relieved by Burke. Ottway slips into a dream of his wife, before being awaken by the dozing Burke. Hernandez has third watch and keeps himself awake by playing his son's Nintendo DS. Nature calls, so Hernandez leaves his post to pee. As he lowers his torch he is torn apart by a pair of wolves. His cries go unheard.

6 SURVIVORS


5 SURVIVORSOttway is the first to awaken and finds the remains of Hernandez strewn across the camp. This makes matters worse because the wolves killed Hernandez, but didn't eat any of him; this was a territorial kill. Ottway tells the others that they can't stay at the crash site any longer, as it provides little defense to the wolves. He points to the trees in the distance and tells them that the forest should provide ample cover from attacks. This upsets Diaz. He tells the others that Ottway has no plan, and that they ought to tough it out and wait for rescue. Ottway tells the others to make their own choice and packs his bag. He finds his rifle bag, but the rifle is broken and beyond repair; he grabs the few remaining shells and pockets them. He also finds the note he had written to his wife, and pockets it. Hendrick volunteers to go with Ottway, and Ottway tells him to gather the wallets of the dead to give to their families. Eventually all five agree to go with Ottway. At sunrise they set out toward the treeline with Flannery bringing up the rear. Flannery nurses his wounded leg and complains that the others are going too fast. A small pack of wolves appears and takes down Flannery. The others stop and run back to save him, but aren't fast enough. They take Flannery's wallet and leave his body in the snow.

The five remaining survivors reach the treeline and barely avoid being eaten by the wolves nipping at their heels. They tumble down a snowbank into the forest and hurriedly assemble a fire. They listen as dozens of wolves surround them, but don't attack. A loud shriek of pain and growling erupts from one direction. Ottway recognizes the sound of the Alpha wolf being challenged by another male, and says the Alpha won. He describes that when an Alpha is challenged, and loses, the pack will regard the victor as the new Alpha. Ottway tells them all to take long sticks, sharpen the ends, harden them in the fire and tape his rifle shells to the pointed ends of the sticks. If any wolf gets too close, stab it with the bullet-end of the stick. The bullet should discharge and give the wolf a nasty wound. Diaz is the most irritable of the bunch. He elbows Talget in the face and threatens mutiny against Ottway and throws his shock-stick away. Diaz pulls a knife on Ottway, but Ottway swiftly disarms him and knocks him to the ground. As Diaz gets to his feet he is face-to-face with a giant wolf only a few feet away, staring at him -- The Alpha. The Alpha is easily twice the size of any of the wolves they've seen so far, with jet black fur and green eyes. Ottway orders them all to stare back at the Alpha and to hold their ground. Diaz is the only one to take a few steps back. The Alpha backs away into the shadows. Diaz asks Ottway what the Alpha wanted. Ottway tells him, "to kill you"; Diaz is humbled. He begins to apologize for his actions, but is swiftly taken off his feet by a smaller, lighter wolf. The others stab the wolf with their shock-sticks and manage to kill it. The howling of the wolves around them goes silent. Ottway tells them that this is the Omega -- the banished wolf who attempted to dethrone the Alpha, and lost. He attacked Diaz out of desperation of social acceptance. While Diaz repeatedly stabs the Omega, Ottway tells the rest to "find the longest, biggest stick we can find and shove it up this thing's ass. 'Cuz we're going to cook it, and then we're going to eat it, and they're going to watch us do it." They gorge themselves on the meat of the Omega while Diaz, filled with primeval adrenaline, cuts the head off of the Omega and chucks it into the woods. This elicits a long collective howl of the wolves which surround them.

Ottway tells them that they have to move to a more defensible position. They move further into the forest with torches in hand. Burke coughs and sputters, and asks for a rest stop. Ottway find a suitable place to rest - a dead end - saying that in a dead end they can only be attacked from one direction. They set up a fire and Burke falls asleep. Talget tells the group of his daughter he had with is ex-wife, and her waist-length hair, and how she's the only thing that's keeping him alive. Diaz says his only motivation is to have sex again, as his last encounter was with a 54 year old Alaskan prostitute with numerous STDs. Ottway shares little about his past, only telling them about his childhood. He reflects on a memory he had as a boy, sitting on his father's lap. He recites a poem written by his father about embracing death. Burke violently awakens and speaks of a young girl, before drifting back to sleep. The group collectively asks who the girl is, and Hendrick answers - she was Burke's little sister who died thirty years earlier. Burke is showing signs of severe hypoxia, most notably hallucination. Thunder echoes from the distance, a bad storm is coming. The next morning Talget, Diaz, & Hendrick huddle together as the blizzard pounds them. Ottway shouts at Burke to wake up, but Burke shows no signs of life, having died in his sleep.

4 SURVIVORS


3 SURVIVORSHendrick takes Burke's wallet, while Ottway searches for civilization. Ottway comes across a freshly cut tree stump, tagged with an orange sticker. The forest has been recently lumbered. The group hears a river nearby, and they run for it. They reach the river, which sits a hundred feet below the sheer cliff-face upon which they are standing. Ottway tells them that they must follow the river, as it holds the greatest potential of civilization and rescue. They must rappel down to the river from the cliff-face, and they must do it quickly because the wolves are hot on their trail. One of them must jump off of the rocks into the trees across the river, carrying a rope behind them. The rest will cross the rope into the trees, and they will all climb down to the river. Hendrick takes the charge of jumping into the trees. After a frightening plunge, Hendrick secures the makeshift rope and orders the rest to hurry across. Diaz crosses first, and is soon followed by Ottway. Talget, who admits to being afraid of heights, follows last. As he nears the middle of the rope, Talget's glasses are swept off of his face and his bloody hand causes him to snag the makeshift rope. The rope is torn in two and Talget swings across the river and slams face-first into a tree before falling painfully to the ground below. Through his eyes Talget imagines his young daughter, with her waist-length hair towering above him; her hair dances across his face. In reality a wolf pack devours him and drags him back into the woods. Diaz frantically descends the tree in an attempt to save Talget. He leaps from a high branch and lands awkwardly on his leg, hurting his knee. Hendrick takes Talget's wallet and the three follow the river.

Diaz brings up the rear of the trio, hobbling on his good leg. He winces every time he puts pressure on his wounded knee. After a few miles Diaz stops. The other two turn back to check on him, and Diaz tells them to go on without him. His tank ran out of gas five miles ago, and he is done. Diaz reaches into his back-pocket and gives the shocked Hendrick his wallet, and passes the GPS watch to Ottway. The three, for the first time, exchange their first names: Diaz' is John, Hendrick's is Peter, and Ottway's is also John. Diaz faces back at the mountains they've climbed over, and implies that the beautiful image is meant to be the last he sees. He props himself up against a log and looks at the vista. Off-camera a growl is heard.

2 SURVIVORS

Hendrick and Ottway make their way along the river bank, trudging through 3 feet of snow. Hendrick asks Ottway the question that has been bothering him all week: Hendrick saw Ottway leave the bar with his rifle after his shift was complete, and Ottway had the same look of defeat on his face that Diaz had a few hours earlier. Hendrick asks if Ottway planned to kill himself. Before he can answer, two wolves come bursting out of the treeline, sprinting after them. Hendrick slips and falls into the icy river, and Ottway follows a minute later. Hendrick drifts down river, is pulled under by the current, and gets his legs lodged in a pile of rocks. Ottway dives down to save him, and attempts to breathe air into Hendrick's lungs, but Hendrick continues to struggle and drowns himself. Ottway shouts profanities at God, telling him to forget faith and give him a sign. Nothing comes.

1 SURVIVOR

Ottway drags himself out of the water, with Hendrick's backpack in his hand. He sheds much of his drenched outerwear and treks deep into the forest. He comes to a clearing, and feeling defeated, he drops to his knees, pulls the white bag out of Hendrick's backpack and withdraws all the wallets within. One-by-one he opens the wallets and looks at the pictures of the men and their families, before stacking them on a pile before him. He daydreams of his wife again. The two lay in the same bed with white sheets, only this time we see an I.V. dripping behind the wife. Ottway pulls out his own wallet, and stares at the picture of his deceased wife, and finally places it atop the pile. He takes the letter he had written to her, unfolds it, and places it on the stack. He hears rustling around him, and finally takes in his surroundings: dead animals carcasses, antlers, bones, all in one concentrated location. Ottway gets his sign; he is in the wolves' den. A dozen wolves surround him, and the Alpha appears before him, challenging him. Ottway recites the poem written by his father. With what little energy he has left Ottway reaches into his backpack, grabs three small bottles of booze pilfered from the plane and tapes them between his fingers. He then takes his knife and tapes it firmly into the palm of his other hand. He shatters the bottles, creating broken glass-knuckles. The Alpha growls, Ottway shouts, and the two run at one another.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Updating iOS5 Tips

Problems updating to iOS 5? Here's what you need to know


iPhone and iPod users have reported a variety of problems when trying to upgrade to iOS5 (...

iPhone and iPod users have reported a variety of problems when trying to upgrade to iOS5 (Photo: Apple)


The latest version of Apple's iOS left many iPod and iPhone users shaking their heads when they tried to upgrade. Problems ranged from lengthy downloads of the new iOS from iTunes, to some users who had been left with bricked phones and erased contacts after the update. Others complained that their paid apps had been wiped from their phones, and not restored when they did get iOS up and running.

On a personal level, about 50-percent of my iPhone-using friends experienced severe problems, the most common of which was a bricked phone. Those that did get the update still experienced issues with paid apps not showing up ready for download in iTunes. Those with bricked phones were forced to do a factory reset, and lost all of their contacts, saved notes, photos and videos.

The first signs of trouble began popping up on Twitter and in forums about an hour after the release of iOS 5.

Here's a quick rundown of the most common problems users are reporting, and a fix, if one exists.

"Internal Error 3200"

This is an error message that pops up during the iOS 5 upgrade process that indicates Apple's authentication servers aren't responding.

The fix: This problem has mostly fixed itself. The problem originated from the entire world trying to download the new iOS right as it had launched. Apple has opened up new server space, and the demand is dying off slowly due to reports of problems.

"Error -34"

If you get this error, it's iTunes reporting to the Apple server that you are out of disk space. As some of you have figured out, this may not be the case.

The fix: There isn't one just yet, but it was discovered that the problem originates mostly with users who compress their files to 128Kbps so that they can fit more music on their iPod. When upgrading, it seems that the file size is being reverted to the uncompressed form. Apple is aware of the issue.

"Error 1603"

Although the cause of this error is unknown, it's supposed to put your device into recovery mode shortly after you see it. It's not doing that in all cases with this new update. This is what most users refer to as a "bricked" iPhone or iPod touch.

The fix: You'll have to put your phone into forced recovery mode. You stand a good chance of losing stored data as your phone recovers. This is why it's always a good idea to make a backup of your data before doing a new iOS install.

Putting your iPhone or iPod Touch into forced recover mode

Disconnect the USB cable from the device, but leave the other end connected to the USB port on your computer.

Turn off the device by holding down the Sleep/Wake button. A red slider will appear next. Slide the slider and then wait as the device shuts off. If holding the power button doesn't turn off the device, press the Sleep/Wake button and the home button at the same time until the device powers down. Don't release the Sleep/Wake button or the home button until the device is off.

Press and hold the Home button while reconnecting the USB cable to the iPhone. Once the device is connected, it should begin to power on. Don't release the Home button.

Continue to hold the Home button until the "Connect to iTunes" screen appears. Release the button.

If iTunes doesn't open automatically, open it manually. You should see the "recovery alert" pop up.

Follow the prompts and allow iTunes to restore the iPhone or iPod touch.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Apple's new iPhone 4S

No iPhone 5 folks, but say hello to Apple's new iPhone 4S


Apple's new CEO Tim Cook has taken the wraps off the company's new iPhone - the 4S

Apple's new CEO Tim Cook has taken the wraps off the company's new iPhone - the 4S



In his first product launch since becoming CEO, Apple's Tim Cook has announced a new version of the iPhone at Apple HQ in Cupertino, California. The iPhone 4S retains the ground-breaking Retina display technology and glass back of its predecessor, but has undergone something of an internal overhaul. Apple's new smartphone gets a brand new dual-core processor, an 8 megapixel camera capable of also shooting full high definition video, and a new personal assistant application that uses voice recognition. The 4S also promises up to double the previous download speeds and will be available on over 100 carriers worldwide.

Announced in the very same room as 2001's original iPod, Apple's new iPhone 4S runs on the new iOS 5 platform and is powered by the company's new dual-core A5 chip, that's said to be twice as fast as its predecessor. Mobile gamers will no doubt be pleased to hear that the included dual-core graphics are up to seven times faster than before. The new smartphone's battery life is claimed to offer either eight hours of 3G talk time, six hours of browsing, nine hours on Wi-Fi, ten hours of video playback, or 40 hours of music.

As the rumor-mill predicted, the 4S features a new 8 megapixel camera sensor (in actuality a 3264 x 2448 pixel resolution, backside illuminated CMOS sensor). There's a hybrid IR filter for more accurate colors and a five element f/2.4 aperture lens for 30 percent sharper images. The sensor also caters for full 1080p high definition video recording with image stabilization and noise reduction. Users can line up a shot using optional onscreen grid lines, and the new Photo app allows for simple in-device editing - such as crop, rotate, enhance and red-eye removal.

Access to the camera has been simplified - users just need to double-tap on the home screen to activate the new camera app, and use the volume up button as a shutter release. A new Apple-designed Image Signal Processor caters for face detection, improved white balance, and it sees the camera ready for its first shot in just 1.1 seconds (in only 0.5 seconds, the next one can be captured).

Improved call quality and voice control

Apple says that intelligent switching between the transmit and receive antennas results in much improved call quality, and users are no longer asked to choose between GSM or CDMA networks, as the 4S supports both. Theoretical data download capabilities have been doubled to up to 14.4 Mbps with HSDPA, with uplink remaining the same as the iPhone 4 at 5.8 Mbps. The 4S has also been treated to AirPlay Mirroring, which allows gamers to throw the device's image onto the big screen - wired or wireless.

As previously mentioned, perhaps most impressive of all the new features is an Intelligent Assistant named Siri, which uses sophisticated voice recognition technology to do your bidding. Press down the onscreen icon and speak to Siri via the phone's microphone, then everything from the local real-time weather to checking stocks and shares to setting appointments, alarms and reminders to searching online for information, is made available via vocal commands.

Apple has also included a beta version Dictation feature that currently supports U.S., UK and Australian flavors of English, along with French and German, with more languages to follow in the near future.

Pricing and availability

Pre-orders for the new iPhone 4S will start on October 7, with U.S., Canada, Australia, UK, France, Germany, and Japan getting first bite on October 14. Verizon, AT&T and Sprint have all been confirmed as U.S. carriers and both black and white versions will cost US$199 for the 16GB model, US$299 for the 32GB version and US$399 for the 64GB flavor (with a 2-year contract).

Another 22 countries (including Mexico, Singapore and most of the rest of Europe) will take delivery from October 28, and the 4S will be available in 70 countries by the year's end.

In other news...

The Apple team also highlighted a few of the 200 plus new features in the new iOS 5 platform - including an interruption-free, swipe down Notification Center, a new iMessage service for sending and receiving text messages, photos and videos between iOS device users, location-aware Reminders, the Newsstand feature with background downloading of latest subscribed issues, and wireless, PC-free updates. There's also an update to the Safari browser that brings tabbed browsing to the iPad and new reader functionality with device sync. iOS 5 will be available from October 12.

Apple is also launching its iCloud services on October 12, including Find My Friends, where you can view the locations of friends who've opted to share - useful for guiding lost guests to your new house. iTunes in the Cloud comes with iTunes Match, that scans your own music library, upgrades matched songs to 256kbps AAC file format, and places the matched files into iTunes - all for US$24.99 per year (available in the U.S. from the end of this month). iCloud comes with 5GB of online storage free for iOS/OS X Lion users, with more available at a price.

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