Archive for March 26th, 2012

26 March
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Microsoft, West Coast Customs Create the Ultimate 400-hp ‘Device’

Images: Microsoft

How do you remake an automotive icon? If you’re West Coast Customs, it starts with some oversized dubs and copious quantities of neon lighting. If you’re the Microsoft skunkworks development team, it means incorporating the company’s entire suite of mobile and gaming services into one of Motown’s greatest pony cars.

Despite what you see above, this isn’t a 1967 Ford Mustang. The fastback body is a replica produced by Dynacorn, but underneath are the modern components of a 2012 Mustang chassis. But like momma always said, it’s what’s on the inside that counts, and that’s where the West Coast Customs crew and their compatriots at Microsoft went wild.

It starts with a Lumia 800 running Windows Phone 7 and Viper’s SmartStart app, which allows the user to locate, lock, unlock and start the car remotely. Once inside, a fully digital instrument cluster provides a choice of eight different “skins,” including replicas of the 1967 and 2012 Mustang’s IP, along with a Metro-style design. Above that is a heads-up display that provides everything from telemetry to navigation data, complete with Bing Maps integration, turn-by-turn directions and point-of-interest icons showing nearby restaurants, gas stations and shopping centers.

Being a Ford product, the Blue Oval’s Sync system is on board for traffic information, voice controls and audio apps, while a tablet built into the dash on the passenger side allows your companion to play XBox 360 with an embedded Kinect setup.

The Kinetic integration goes even further, with two hackable motion detectors mounted front and back to keep tabs on the surroundings and alert drivers about pedestrians and other objects in the ‘Stang’s path. The video from the two systems can also be streamed to your phone thanks to a 4G hotspot, and partnered with the external speakers and customizable screen mounted into the rear windshield, you can scream at the kids surrounding your ride and let the driver behind you know that he’s following too closely.

Even better, Microsoft will be making all the source code from “Project Detroit” available on CodePlex in the next few weeks, so you can start integrating some of these same systems in your own vehicle.

If you’re interested in following the build, check out Channel 9′s site and watch the Discovery Velocity Network’s this Sunday at 9:00 PM, as taste of which is available in the video below.

All photos: Courtesy of Microsoft

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

26 March
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Did Consumer Reports Show Its Cards in Coverage of the Fisker Karma?

Consumer Reports deals in trust – particularly when it comes to vehicle testing. Unlike other automotive outlets, CR puts its money where its mouth is, purchasing its test cars from dealers to ensure that it’s getting the same car, and the same level of service, that an average consumer would get.

But in a recent test of the $107,000 Fisker Karma, Consumer Reports may have tipped its hand with a blog post.

The publication was putting the Karma through its initial battery of tests earlier this month when the plug-in hybrid displayed a fault on the dashboard. The car was eventually rendered immobile, unable to shift into neutral, with less than 200 miles on the odometer.

Consumer Reports shipped the car off to the nearest Fisker dealer, and CR’s Tom Mutchler told the whole story on Consumer Reports’ blog, including video of the Fisker being pulled onto a flatbed truck. “We buy about 80 cars a year and this is the first time in memory that we have had a car that is undriveable before it has finished our check-in process,” he wrote.

After two days of service, technicians were able to reproduce the problem. They found a fault in the battery and its associated inverter carrier and “both were replaced as a unit,” Mutchler wrote in a follow-up story. The car made its way back to Consumer Reports’ testing facility in East Haddam, Connecticut.

But at the time of the initial blog post, Thursday March 8, the vehicle was still in the shop, confirms Gabriel Shenhar, Consumer Reports’ electric vehicle expert. Doesn’t that mean Fisker knew full well that it had a particularly important Karma under repair?

Shenhar contends that Consumer Reports’ Karma hasn’t been tampered with, saying that it holds the same amount of charge and contains the “same brains” as it did before it went in for service. “We’ve been in touch with the company and we know that we didn’t get special treatment,” Shenhar says, “And if we did, we’d make some noise about that.”

We’ve contacted the two closest Fisker dealerships to Consumer Reports’ testing facility – Fisker of Great Neck, NY and Miller Motorcars of Greenwich, CT – to determine if the Consumer Reports car was serviced at either dealership. Fisker of Great Neck claims the Karma wasn’t there, while Miller Motorcars wouldn’t disclose what vehicles have been in for service, but did say that it has not replaced a battery pack on a Fisker Karma.

Image: Consumer Reports

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

26 March
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Want to Heat Your Coffee With Your iPad? There’s an App for That

HotPad

Imagine this scenario: your coffee has gone cold, and you’re simply too lazy to get up from your desk, go to the microwave and reheat it. If you have the new iPad, however, there may be a solution for this problem: the HotPad.

HotPad is a simple web app that “overclocks” your iPad’s CPU, and displays virtual heat coils on its screen, where you can place your coffee and keep it warm for hours.

Of course, it’s all a joke, and we definitely don’t recommend you placing any hot beverage on your iPad (or any other gadget, for that matter). The app is a clever take on the recent iPad heat controversy – Heatgate, if you will – in which a slew of reports claim that the new iPad is heating up considerably more than the iPad 2.

The app was concocted by the pranksters at Primary Coffee Company, which claims that the “app” won’t hurt your iPad, but placing coffee on it might.

As far as Heatgate goes, we’re not sure all the controversy we’ve seen out there is warranted. After all, pretty much all the gadgets you use – your PC, laptop and phone – get a little hot sometimes.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

26 March
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Why ‘World of Warcraft’ Might Get You More Dates Than Match.com INFOGRAPHIC

Most guys aren’t grinding away at their Level 45 Battle Mage in order to meet the ladies. But online gaming across the board is becoming more mainstream, and lots of people spend lots of time in virtual worlds — men and women alike.

Despite the growing popularity of online dating networks, they still don’t hold a candle to gaming juggernauts like World of Warcraft in terms of user base and interaction. And according to the studies aggregated in the infographic below, the meaningful connections gamers make over online adventures go a lot further toward relationship building.

The folks at onlinuniversity.net have made a compelling case that digital dungeon diving might be better for your love life than Match.com.

Have you fostered a romantic connection with an online gaming companion? Do you play online games with your significant other? Or do you think online dating (or even traditional dating!) is a better way to pinpoint the perfect mate?

Infographic courtesy of onlinuniversity.net.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

26 March
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How Tech Will Transform the Traditional Classroom

Ben Jackson is a writer and app developer living in Brooklyn, NY. He likes clean typography, dirty language, strong coffee, apple pie and comfortable chairs, and he writes about his obsessions at 90WPM.

As the post-PC era moves from interesting theory to cold, hard reality, one of the most pressing questions is: How can we use tablets, and especially the iPad, to help people learn?

Most of the focus has been on ebooks replacing textbooks, a trend fueled by Apple’s recent updates to iBooks. Specifically, the company released iBooks Author, a tool for creating immersive ebooks on the desktop.

Plus, the new iPad is now the first tablet with a retina screen, making reading and watching multimedia on the device even more enjoyable.

But technology is only as good as the system it’s applied to. Much like a fresh coat of paint will not improve the fuel efficiency of a ’69 Mustang, the application of technology to a broken system masks deeper problems with short-term gains.


Not Just a Textbook


The iPad (not to mention the iPhone and iPod touch) is a personal, mobile computer capable of performing tasks unthinkable 10 years ago on a high-end desktop.

For starters, the device features an incredibly natural user interface. Andy Brovey, one of about 1,500 teachers who have been chosen for Apple’s Distinguished Educators program, says, “There is a connection between the tip of your finger and the edge of your mind.”

Besides its advantages over traditional PCs — like “instant on”, all-day battery life, freedom from messy cords, and the elimination of what Edward Tufte called “computer administrative debris” — the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch can augment or replace many classroom tools, and accomplish the following.

Of course, schools need to budget not just for the purchase of iPads, but for apps as well. Fortunately, Apple makes it easy to buy apps and ebooks in bulk through the Apple Volume Purchase Program.


Low-Budget Alternatives


If your school can’t afford iPads, consider less expensive alternatives. Essa Academy had great success with its iPod Touch program.

And there are plenty of free tools to liven up the classroom.

Incorporating iPads does not require new classroom equipment, and in fact, can breathe new life into old tools. For example, legacy VGA projectors can be retrofitted to work with an Apple TV using a $60 adaptor, allowing teachers to use Netflix, YouTube and iTunes rentals. What’s more, students can wirelessly project their iPad screens at any time.

SEE ALSO: This Is How Apple Changes Education, Forever
Remember, just because it has a touchscreen doesn’t mean it’s an iPad. Fraser Speirs, head of computing at Cedars School of Excellence, cautions schools against settling on less-expensive Android tablets for many reasons, not the least of which is that Google has a poor track record delivering updates to users through carriers. If you decide to go with an Android device, don’t be surprised when you receive a shipment of two-month-old tablets only to find out that none of them run Google Chrome.


How to Do an iPad Pilot


The majority of iPad pilots are based on the lending model. Speirs calls this the “iPad cart” philosophy, named after the “computer carts” common in schools before they installed machines in labs or issued laptops to students.

However, Speirs cites it as a common error. In his opinion, “The iPad, and computers like it…make school look like the society in which we live: one-to-one computers.” This is a much more important lesson than any measurable gains, such as test scores. The iPad “makes the school relevant to the culture in which education is happening,” he says. “And that’s much more important than a few points on math tests. Because if the school’s not culturally relevant, then mass disillusionment is the result.”

Consider his analogy: “What would it be like if all the people who write for Mashable had three computers between them? How would you do your job if you only got your computer on a Friday?” Speirs equates technology education to handwriting education, and believes computer literacy should be taught alongside other subjects rather than confined to a lab.

An Oklahoma State University study indicated that 75% of the students in the pilot agreed that the iPad enhanced the learning experience, and only 3% would opt out for a similar course with no iPad.

Another common pitfall is not using iCloud. For one, students doing work on an iPad will never again be able to say that the dog — or their PCs — ate their term papers. In addition, iCloud abstracts the file system, putting an end to misplaced documents and wasted class time while students search for the previous week’s assignment. Spiers also sites iCloud in his argument for student email accounts. While giving email to an eight-year-old may seem risky, Google apps for educators allow schools to use Gmail while administrators monitor student use.

While it may seem obvious, all the iPads in the world are useless without fast WiFi and plenty of power outlets. What’s more, many schools forget that teachers need their own iPads, and must become avid users, too. Speirs reminds educators, “You have to think through how it is to actually live with this device.”

Finally, Speirs cautions teachers not to be intimidated by parent and faculty expectations, to gradually introduce the iPad rather than rushing in. Teachers and school administrators may wish to refer to Ruben Puentedura’s excellent argument for tech in education and to the NMC Horizon Report. And look for inspiration in existing iPad pilots.


Obstacles to Progress


The media loves to hold up technology, and especially the iPad, as the savior of America’s overworked public school system. In reality, however, there are many reasons why students have difficulty learning — and not having enough computers doesn’t top the list. These reasons generally fall under three umbrellas: political, pedagogical and cultural.

Politics greatly influences school curriculum. Elected school boards make decisions about what to teach; federal funding is contingent on meeting standardized testing requirements; and local governments determine who may open a school, where they can build it, and who can attend.

Often, poorly thought-out or outdated legislation and policies not only hurt the existing educational experience, but also block technological progress. And because policies are made on a local basis, there is no way to ensure that sensible ones are put in place across all schools.

Pedagogy is more ingrained, and harder to change. For example, it was long thought that the most effective way to teach most subjects was through rote memorization. We now know this not to be true. And while a community may elect new officials every two to four years, teaching methods are developed over decades and rarely change without a fight.

Digital whiteboards, for example, have many benefits over their analog equivalents. But try explaining that to a science teacher who’s been using an overhead projector to teach biology for the last 30 years. As Rob Kling wrote in 1996, “schools do, on some level, understand the implications of the technology, and they resist them.”

The most difficult problems in education, however, are often cultural. For instance, one might suggest that more efficient classrooms through the use of technology could allow for a shortened or staggered school day to serve more, smaller classes. But, according to Brovey, “It is difficult for us to imagine a school structure where class time becomes more fluid.”

This also ignores one of the primary cultural roles of the American school: It is, effectively, the largest babysitting service in the country. What is to be done with those children once they’ve finished class? Where will they go? What will they do?

These kinds of questions are enough to make any school board official quickly change the subject to less-controversial solutions. At each turn, educators must reconcile their desire to bring technology to the classroom closer with their legal obligations.


Tumblr, Twitter and CIPA


The issue of Internet access in schools is particularly thorny. The Child Internet Protection Act (CIPA) requires that school intranets filter inappropriate content. To that end, many schools err on the side of safety, often to an unnecessary degree. For example, YouTube is blocked by most schools, even though the site doesn’t violate CIPA.

In addition, many popular websites lie in uncertain territory. Those which rely on user generated content, like Pinterest, Tumblr or Twitter, are potential minefields.

Tumblr poses a particularly vexing problem. The site has become a hub for sharing news, links and inspiration, and yet it also hosts innumerable sites that consist of little more than nude photos, both artful and pornographic.

But what happens when these sites cease to be niche communities and become the go-to sources for information in the real world? Twitter is the undisputed channel for everything from breaking news to political and cultural debates. How long can schools block access to it before they become completely irrelevant? The important thing when deciding school online policies, says Brovey, is that “you have to show that you’re exercising due diligence.”

The only way to ensure that important resources are not blocked by the school’s firewall is to allow teachers to bypass those filters, and to have a simple, fast whitelisting process, ideally from the page that appears when a user visits a blocked site.

Brovey notes, “Students can help us to act as gatekeepers,” by identifying false positives as well as inappropriate sites that slip through the filter.


Rethinking “Homework”


With its recent updates to iTunes U, Apple is clearly positioning itself as a poor man’s Blackboard. For many schools, a free system from Apple, even a limited one, is better than nothing.

iTunes U allows students to time-shift more of the passive learning that currently makes up the majority of class time. This has a few benefits. For one, teachers only have to give a lecture once. And students can watch as many times as they want, rewinding and fast-forwarding recordings as needed.

But most importantly, removing lectures from class allows students and teachers to work closely with hands-on assignments. There’s a world of difference between practicing algebra with a trained professional in class, and struggling with the student’s parents at home.

SEE ALSO: Kids and Tech: Parenting Tips for the Digital Age
However, instructors must establish limits. Watching one lecture per night is fine, but how are students to deal with six or seven lectures per day outside of class? Schools will have to consider how and when students will consume the material. More importantly, simply inverting the school day misses an important point: We need to provide students with new and engaging ways of learning, rather than just shuffling around the current methods in hopes of improved efficiency.


A Way Forward


Apple’s ecosystem presents an opportunity to allow students to learn in new and engaging ways, and opens possibilities that were inconceivable even a few years ago. But technology is not a cure-all. Until society addresses the larger problems facing schools, introducing tablets and laptops into packed classrooms with overworked teachers is like putting a band-aid on a broken femur.

Many educators are still skeptical of the iPad, citing the lack of empirical evidence that tech improves test scores as proof that the iPad is all talk and no walk. But this ignores other important metrics, such as student satisfaction and drop-out rates. And at least one controlled study has now confirmed that the iPad does in fact boost algebra scores significantly.

Joel Rose focuses on disrupting long-standing, outdated practices in education with new approaches, rather than adding technology to existing ones. His program, the School of One, focuses on providing personalized instruction that moves at the pace of each student. Technology only comes into play insofar as it advances that personalized instruction. Machine-learning algorithms adapt the curriculum as each student progresses, and monitors direct each student to his or her next lesson.

Services like CourseKit are simple, free course management systems that compete on design and user experience. They look less like classroom tools and more like social networks.

These kinds of innovations may not impress parents or school boards as much as ebooks with interactive charts, but they begin to dig at the roots of the problem, rather than pruning the tips.

Technology’s real promise lies in its ability to disrupt established systems and change the way we frame problems. How should we address the real issues plaguing our schools? Do we need technical solutions to everything? Are these problems better addressed the old-fashioned way, or should we just accept some of them and move on?

Until we acknowledge which problems really need fixing and begin working on ways to solve them, we’ll be stuck with fancy, expensive — but ultimately useless — toys.

Image courtesy of Flickr, flickingerbrad, iStockphotp, arakonyunus

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

26 March
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Cyber Cops Stop Mohammed Merah, Scour Web For Missing Murder Videos

Mohammed Merah, the French terrorist responsible for attacks on Jewish schools and paratroopers, is dead. Here’s how authorities used modern techniques such as IP address forensics and digital surveillance to track him down.

Mohammed Merah, the 24-year-old Frenchman responsible for an Al Qaeda-inspired shooting spree that left seven dead, was killed by police after a day-long siege this morning. Before authorities tracked him down, Merah carried out multiple attacks on a French Jewish school and three paratroopers of North African and Caribbean origin. Modern times being what they are, Merah was primarily caught by cyberdetectives who tracked his online activities.

During the siege, Merah reportedly proclaimed allegiance to Al Qaeda.

Merah was caught because he used his family computer to arrange the first paratrooper’s death. The terrorist pretended he wanted to buy the soldier’s motorcycle; when the soldier met him, he was shot to death (shades of American Craigslist robberies!). The victim, paratrooper Imad Ibn Ziaten, was trying to sell a Suzuki Bandit. In the advert, Ziaten noted that he was a soldier and provided his first name–which identified him as a Frenchman of Arabic or Muslim heritage. Ziaten made plans to meet with Merah on a Sunday afternoon; upon meeting, he was shot in the head at close range–a M.O. that repeated itself in all the killings that followed. Media sources including CNN, France 24, and Le Monde variously report that the computer belonged to either his mother or brother.

Merah was caught because he used his family computer to arrange the first paratrooper’s death.

According to Le Monde’s Yves Bordenave, French cyber police found that 580 users viewed the original motorcycle advertisement. The police obtained IP addresses for these users and attempted to geolocate them, focusing on unspecified districts in the city. Users on the smaller, geotargeted list then became the focus of investigation. Merah became the primary suspect after they viewed emails between him and Ibn Ziaten.

Interestingly, French authorities appear to have been monitoring Merah’s family’s IP address and Internet activity even before he was a suspect. On France24, a public prosecutor working on the case said that the IP address had been monitored two days before Ibn Ziaten’s death, but that further checks still needed to be made. Merah’s brother and girlfriend were also taken into custody; the brother is also known locally for sympathy for Islamist causes. Reuters reports that Merah was not particularly religious and was primarily angry at the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and NATO’s presence in Afghanistan. However, the New York Times’ Dan Bilefsky and Maia de la Baume indicate that Merah was radicalized in prison.

For French speakers, a short profile (including amateur video) of Merah from French public broadcaster France 2 is shown below.

youtube kFGvd38lU-Y

About 30 French guerillas trained by the Taliban are believed by French intelligence to have participated in attacks on NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Later on, Merah visited a Toulouse scooter shop where he requested staff remove an anti-theft GPS tracker device from his Yamaha T MAX 550cc scooter and repaint the vehicle a different color. An employee at the shop discreetly tipped off police. In that classic line beloved by criminals everywhere, Merah told the garage staff that the GPS device-tracked scooter belonged to “a friend.” It has not been confirmed whether Merah stole the scooter or not.

In a post-modern tech twist, Merah is believed to have filmed his murder spree. Survivors at the Ozer Hatorah school in Toulouse reported the gunman appeared to be filming the attack. According to French Interior Minister Claude Guéant, Merah wore “a kind of filming apparatus” on his chest; the country’s police (and a horde of amateur crimesolvers) are currently combing the Internet to see if video was posted online.

Other observers believe Merah may have even made a martyrdom video. Ben Venzke of American jihadi video disseminator IntelCenter claims that “if the French gunman Mohammed Merah met with senior al-Qaeda leadership in Pakistan and was given a mission to conduct attacks in France, as he has claimed, he would have likely recorded a video message while there as occurred with terrorists Mohammed Sidique Khan and Faisal Shahzad.”

Merah has apparently been under surveillance since making two trips to Afghanistan and Pakistan; according to The Daily Beast’s Tracy McNicoll, French intelligence interrogated Merah in November 2011 about his activities in those countries. Merah provided photographs he took and claimed he visited the countries for “tourism.” Guéant also added that the decision to put Merah under surveillance was also influenced by him “already having committed certain infractions, some with violence.” French authorities stated he was arrested 15 times as a youth.

Shortly before French authorities raided Merah’s apartment, the gunman called into French news network France 24 to explain himself and his motives. Senior editor Ebba Kalondo, who took the call, is featured in the (French-language) clip below talking about her conversation with Merah. During the 11-minute call, Merah told Kalondo that he filmed all seven killings and planned to post them to the Internet. He then addded, “I will go to prison with my head held high or die with a smile. Nothing else.”

youtube vd0bTjkci5c

Reportedly, Merah previously attempted to join the French military but was turned down. It is not known at press time whether he acted alone or as part of a group.

For more stories like this, follow @fastcompany

26 March
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Twitter Updates TweetDeck, Allows Users to Edit and Retweet

Still struggling in the wake of its acquisition by Twitter, TweetDeck has just issued an update to its desktop, Chrome and web apps that adds support for better list management, inline media support and improved retweeting support.

The first Twitter-branded version of TweetDeck was released in December, and the reaction was not universally positive. Although Twitter has issued various bug fixes, diehard TweetDeck fans are still missing features that were part of the app pre-Twitter acquisition.

While the latest update doesn’t answer all previous complaints, it does restore some features that never should have gone missing in the first place.

Users can now create, edit and delete lists within the app itself. A “Lists” button is now visible, making it easier to add a list column or edit a list on the fly.

Twitter has also added new columns to list activity and interactions. The interactions column mimics the feature on Twitter.com, showing when users retweet, follow, favorite or add you to a list.

The new activities column shows real-time information on what actions users take. This means you can find out when someone favorites a tweet, starts following someone else or creates a new list.

Twitter has also introduced the inline media previews from Twitter.com and Twitter’s mobile apps to TweetDeck. this mans you can get previews on images and videos underneath a tweet.

The biggest change comes to the way that retweets are handled. The “Quote” option is now gone and replaced with an “Edit and RT” option that allows users to edit a tweet and add the RT distinction.

TweetDeck still has a few niggling issues — such as the way columns are resized — but the latest update is a big step in the right direction.

Are the updates enough to keep you using TweetDeck? Let us know in the comments.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

26 March
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A Challenge To Apple To "Think Different" About Spending Its $100 Billion Cash Stash

Apple should do more than just pay off stockholders with a dividend. It should take the opportunity to redefine what it means to be a corporation.

It’s hard to imagine how big a billion is. Now try with $97.6 billion (call it an even $100 billion), the wad of cash Apple has
squirreled away. One hundred billion one-dollar bills weigh about 200 million pounds (or 100,000
tons, give or take) and if you laid them end-to-end they’d circle the earth 40
times at its widest point, the equator.

26 March
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An Engine As Art In a Thirteen Hour Film

Forget about Bullitt, Ronin and Vanishing Point. There’s a new contender for greatest car movie ever made. It’s called Parts and Labor, and it’s over thirteen hours long.

Instead of Steve McQueen performing multiple stunts, the film stars the engine of a 1982 Volkswagen Rabbit and a pair of greasy hands. Like the still shown above, all the action consists of close ups of the engine being methodically taken apart and put back together again — triple-X rated pornography for the folks over at VW Vortex.

Filmmaker Jesse Cain is both the man behind the camera and the mechanic working on the car, and the project took him over two years. He said he originally wanted to film himself working on an iconic piece of Detroit iron, but chose a broken-down Rabbit since his name was already on its title.

“I decided to be thrifty in the recession environment and fix what I already owned,” Cain said. “The movie is entirely shot with close-ups, each shot composition and duration determined by the size, shape and difficulty of removing or installing each part.” You can watch ten minutes of it in the video clip below.

Cain doesn’t have any illusions about his own abilities as a mechanic, admitting to multiple mistakes he made throughout the process. “It would be fun to sit with an ASE certified mechanic and have him or her critique my work,” he said. “I’m pretty sure there would be some big laughs and horrified cringes at times.”

 

The project started as part of a larger film that Cain had planned, about a boy who fixes a long-neglected car after his family’s home goes into foreclosure. After shooting the scenes with the Rabbit, however, Cain realized the car was the true star.

“I started filming tests of how I imagined the engine scenes would look, and after watching the dailies of these tests I realized that I had already started shooting the film I wanted to make,” he said.

The result was a film that took as long as Cain spent working on the car. “Instead of relying on the usual tricks of filmmaking — jump cuts, time lapse, or simple editing of action — I left the camera rolling and showed the entire process,” he said. “The work involved took me 13 hours, three minutes on camera. It’s kind of a rejection of internet culture and immediacy.”

So far, response has been positive. New York City’s Anthology Film Archives screened Parts and Labor last weekend, offering a special ticket that allowed audience members to come and go as they pleased. The program even touted that the film “out-Warholed Andy.”

“Most people find it very meditative,” Cain said. “It’s very easy to settle into it for a while and become involved in the minutia of the operation. Others say it’s surprisingly riveting. The struggle and success of each shot has its own narrative arc.”

In other words, it’s just like working on a car.

Valve Interactive
An online marketing and design agency in Portland Oregon