New study could explain why we remake certain movies over and over again

Unfortunately, there is no method for eliminating bad reboots.

It's the question that every movie fan asks in summer: why are there so many remakes and sequels and reboots? It turns out that science may have an answer. Unfortunately, if you're hoping for more original stories, the prognosis is not good.

Two network theorists in the Netherlands, Folgert Karsdorp and Antal van den Bosch, just published a study on story networks in Royal Society Open Science. Story networks, they write, are "streams of retellings in which retellers modify and adapt retellings in a gradual and accumulative way." There is also a basic structure that seems to underly how these networks function. To explore retellings, the researchers looked at more than 200 versions of the Little Red Riding Hood story, which had been retold over the past two centuries. They measured the stories' similarity to one another with the amusingly named "bag-of-words" technique, which reveals how many words two texts have in common. Then they created a network diagram showing relatedness between stories over time. Earlier stories became what the researchers called "pre-texts" that inspired later retellings.

Translated into movie terms, you can think of Bram Stoker's original Dracula novel from 1897 as a pre-text, and all of the subsequent movies and TV series as retellings.  A story network grows out of Dracula as people retell the story, then retell the retellings, modifying it as they go. What the researchers found was that retellers rarely went back to the earliest pre-texts but instead preferred to retell more recent versions. In the case of the Dracula story, that would explain why a terrifying, barely human monster in the late nineteenth century is commonly represented today as an ultra-hot guy with sexual magnetism who occasionally goes fangy. As the story got retold throughout the twentieth century, you can see Dracula getting more and more handsome with each retelling, until we expect that Dracula is a suave and charming man with a tragic past. As retellers gravitated toward the most recent retelling, certain aspects of the story were magnified (such as Dracula's hotness) while others were forgotten (for example, we have yet to see a single Dracula retelling that deals with a forgotten aspect of the novel, which is that Dracula's love interest, Mina, is a geek who uses all the latest Victorian recording technology to do research on vampires).

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Wasserwaagen-App: Android-Trojaner im Play Store installiert ungewollt Apps

Malware für Android existiert meist außerhalb des Play Store. Doch in einem aktuellen Fall hat Google eine Schadsoftware übersehen, die das Gerät rootet und innerhalb von 30 Minuten 14 weitere Apps installiert. (Security, Android)

Malware für Android existiert meist außerhalb des Play Store. Doch in einem aktuellen Fall hat Google eine Schadsoftware übersehen, die das Gerät rootet und innerhalb von 30 Minuten 14 weitere Apps installiert. (Security, Android)

Datenrate: Telekom und M-Net gewinnen Connect-Festnetztest

Die Telekom und M-Net haben die besten Bewertungen beim Connect-Festnetztest bekommen. Gemessen wurden Sprachqualität, Datenraten, Antwortzeiten und Videoqualität. Das Niveau ist bei fast allen Anbietern gestiegen. (All-IP, Telekom)

Die Telekom und M-Net haben die besten Bewertungen beim Connect-Festnetztest bekommen. Gemessen wurden Sprachqualität, Datenraten, Antwortzeiten und Videoqualität. Das Niveau ist bei fast allen Anbietern gestiegen. (All-IP, Telekom)

HP Spectre 13 reviewed: Remarkably thin, but not light on power

Trying to out-svelte the svelte masters, HP’s shiny notebook starts at $1,169.

Video shot/edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)

Your smartphone isn't the only thing that companies are obsessed with making thinner. Focus has turned to laptops as well, with the belief that making thin-as-paper and light-as-air notebooks will draw in more of the forever-on-the-go working professionals. Thinness also lends itself to design challenges that both excite and loom over OEMs—on one hand, thin laptops should be inherently sexy, but on the other hand, it can be a challenge to make a truly powerful, performance-driven pancake notebook.

Enter HP's new Spectre 13 laptop. The company bills it as the thinnest notebook in the world, and its sleek, metallic-accented design complements that title. However, unlike Apple's newest MacBook, HP managed to fit full Core i5 and i7 processors into the Spectre, in addition to three USB Type-C ports and a 4-cell battery. While it doesn't come cheap with a starting price of $1,169, it does do its best to offer more power and a fresh design compared to the likes of the MacBook and Dell's XPS 13.

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Star Wars Lego im Test: Das Erwachen der Lustigkeit

Irgendwo ist immer ein Quietscheentchen: Die Lego-Version von Das Erwachen der Macht erzählt die Handlung des letzten Star-Wars-Films – und bietet neben einem soliden Action-Adventure viel gelungenen Humor. (Star Wars, Spieletest)

Irgendwo ist immer ein Quietscheentchen: Die Lego-Version von Das Erwachen der Macht erzählt die Handlung des letzten Star-Wars-Films - und bietet neben einem soliden Action-Adventure viel gelungenen Humor. (Star Wars, Spieletest)

Video-Streaming: Sky Online kommt aufs aktuelle Apple TV

Mehr Auswahl auf dem aktuellen Apple TV: Mit dem Erscheinen der Sky-Online-App kann das Sky-Sortiment bequemer auf Apples Streaming-Box genutzt werden. Ein für Deutschland wichtiger Dienst fehlt allerdings weiterhin. (Apple TV, Apple)

Mehr Auswahl auf dem aktuellen Apple TV: Mit dem Erscheinen der Sky-Online-App kann das Sky-Sortiment bequemer auf Apples Streaming-Box genutzt werden. Ein für Deutschland wichtiger Dienst fehlt allerdings weiterhin. (Apple TV, Apple)

Extreme/Ultra Micro-SD: Sandisk will die schnellste µSD-Karte mit 256 GByte haben

Enorme fünf MByte pro Sekunde flotter als die Konkurrenz: Nach Samsung hat auch Sandisk zwei Micro-SD-Speicherkarten mit 256 GByte Kapazität angekündigt und spricht von den schnellsten der Welt. (Speichermedien, Storage)

Enorme fünf MByte pro Sekunde flotter als die Konkurrenz: Nach Samsung hat auch Sandisk zwei Micro-SD-Speicherkarten mit 256 GByte Kapazität angekündigt und spricht von den schnellsten der Welt. (Speichermedien, Storage)

BND-Gesetzreform: Voller Zugriff auf die Kabel der Telekom

Die Bundesregierung verspricht das Gegenteil, aber die Reform des BND-Gesetzes würde die Befugnisse des Geheimdienstes ausdehnen. Und ihn der Kontrolle weiter entziehen. (BND, Datenschutz)

Die Bundesregierung verspricht das Gegenteil, aber die Reform des BND-Gesetzes würde die Befugnisse des Geheimdienstes ausdehnen. Und ihn der Kontrolle weiter entziehen. (BND, Datenschutz)

Premier League: Manchester City will Fußballdaten hacken lassen

Fast alle professionellen Sportvereine analysieren ihre Spieler mittlerweile im Detail. Doch wie sind diese Daten zu interpretieren und was kann man daraus lernen? Ein britischer Premier-League-Club lädt jetzt Hacker ein, um das besser zu verstehen. (Hackathon, Internet)

Fast alle professionellen Sportvereine analysieren ihre Spieler mittlerweile im Detail. Doch wie sind diese Daten zu interpretieren und was kann man daraus lernen? Ein britischer Premier-League-Club lädt jetzt Hacker ein, um das besser zu verstehen. (Hackathon, Internet)

Racing with royalty—Behind the scenes with Pikes Peak’s “King of the Mountain”

We embed with the team as it aims to be fastest overall at the event’s 100th anniversary.

Nobuhiro "Monster" Tajima's team checks over his 2016 Tajima Rimac E-Runner Concept_One at the start line before heading out for a practice run. (credit: Elle Cayabyab Gitlin)

Even as a young man in Japan, Nobuhiro "Monster" Tajima knew he wanted to compete in the annual Pikes Peak International Hill Climb. The race is the second oldest in the United States—2016 marks its 100th anniversary—and this track provides a rare challenge to driver and car in motorsport. Its 12.4 miles (19.9km) have more corners than the Nürburgring. The course rises 4,750 feet (1,440m) from the start line to the summit, finishing at 14,100 feet (4,300m). And forget mental images of mountain roads as nothing but switchbacks; there are plenty of straights and fast corners with nothing but a sharp drop off to one side.

And it's truly a hill climb. Racers set off one after another, and they only get one run. In fact, the first time they're able to drive the full 12.4 miles flat-out is during Sunday's race—practice and qualifying take place on shorter stretches of the route. For most of the race's history, the road to the top of the mountain was dirt. Paving started in 1998 following concerns about erosion, and the race has run on tarmac exclusively since 2012.

The unique setup means both car and driver must call upon different skills to set the fastest time of the day. Perfectly balanced drifts have given way to maximizing corner speed, and the tires are racing slicks with no tread blocks. But there's still that huge climb in altitude, almost 3 miles (4.3km) up to where there's much less air to push down on wings or feed engines and radiators. On top of all that, the weather can give you four different seasons between the starting line and the summit, bringing with it all the associated consequences for track temperature and grip.

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