Suresh Productions
YouTube Channel
Suresh Productions is one of India's largest integrated production houses in India. The essence of...
Hindi Tutorials
YouTube Channel
Hello N Namaskar Dosto Mai Hu KISAN SAROJ .....Aur AAP dekh rahe hai hamara YouTube Channel Hindi...
Huawei Mate 10 Pro
Tech Watch
Long-lasting Power Full day use for heavy duty users with smart battery management. Ultimate...
Anker PowerWave Wireless
Tech Watch
Charge Forward: Exclusive WaveBoost technology uses advanced components and a state-of-the-art...
Bose SoundTouch 300 Sound Bar
Tech Watch
Packed with technologies that deliver immersive and spacious sound, so you can bring your music,...
The Vision: Yesterday and Tomorrow
Book
The android Avenger goes solo His memories downloaded and stolen, a partially amnesiac Vision must...
BBC Focus Magazine
News and Magazines & Newspapers
App
*** Specialist Magazine of the Year winner at the Digital Magazine Awards 2016 *** BBC Focus...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Black Mirror - Season 2 in TV
Jan 15, 2018
We explore the use of our online personalities to recreate ourselves after we die (though this quickly became more about robots than the differences in our personalities between online and the real world so for me a trick missed to an extent).
We see a post-apocalyptic world where one woman wakes up to be haunted by people filming her on mobile phones while she runs from psychopaths trying to kill her. This is a look at how obsessed the world is with filming and documenting everything, even unpleasant events happening to other people, and voyeurism as a whole. There is a massive twist at the end which makes what was a jarring, inconsistent episode (as in doesn't fit in with the rest of the series) into an exceptional look at an aspect of the world (spoiler avoided).
I found the Waldo episode to be incredibly irritating. As if a rude, cartoonish character with tiny hands could ever really be taken seriously in the world of politics?! Waldo shows an echo of Ali G's rise to fame but takes it to the next level. While I don't think we are meant to actually find Waldo funny, I found him very annoying and a step too far. Weirdly he reminded me of the banter comedy in Nathan Barley (it turns out this story was originally written for Nathan Barley).
The Christmas special was possibly my favourite of the episodes, Rafe Spall and Jon Hamm (Don Draper) living in awkward circumstances in a cabin. We are led to believe they are working at a remote mining operation or some such and finally start to bond over Christmas dinner and open up. They share stories about their lives before they moved, all three showing the benefits and perils of the technology whereby people can stream their lives to others (and get real-time dating advice) but can also block others from their lives (whereby they are pixelated to you and vice versa). Parts of this story were truly harrowing, how a happy relationship could quickly turn sour and the technology mean years of upset that could be avoided.
Fewer, Bigger, Bolder: From Mindless Expansion to Focused Growth
Sanjay Khosla and Mohanbir Sawhney
Book
Fewer, Bigger, Bolder will teach you how to make billions by scaling back, expanding less and...
Dictate - Talk text messages
Social Networking and Productivity
App
'Dictate' allows to dictate text messages into your device instead of typing. It uses speech to text...