0

PEAK-System

Cactus Technologies

The_night_flier_il_volatore_notturno_1997-altad...

No items found.
CANopen Magic is a software to configure, monitor, analyze, and simulate devices and networks that are based on CANopen and CANopen FD. CANopen Magic is available in the versions Lite, Professional, and Ultimate.
SKU
PKS/IPES-002098
€ 285.00 
€ 285.00 
5-6 weeks lead time
1-2 weeks lead time
1-2 weeks lead time
Buy now

Product features

All versions support:

  • Reading and writing objects using SDO transfers
  • Support of SDO modes Expedited, Segmented, and Blocked
  • Symbolic trace interpretation (node X, access to object Y)
  • Long-term trace recording
  • Support of CANopen FD

In addition, the Professional version offers:

  • Window for simplified PDO configuration
  • Graphical data display
  • Import of symbolic information from CANopen EDS files
  • Multiple symbolic trace windows® with individual filters
  • Support of complex application profiles like CiA® 447
  • Integrated LSS master module
  • Command line support

In addition, the Ultimate version offers:

  • Simulation of CANopen devices based on EDS files
  • Display of network diagram
  • Display of trace analysis diagram

Detailed information on this and other software products from Embedded Systems Academy can be found on the website www.canopenmagic.com. On request, we also sell other software products of Embedded Systems Academy.

Please note

Prices for single use and installation with computer-bound registration process via Internet. The software is delivered electronically.
Therefore, please enter the e-mail address of the intended recipient in the delivery address or in the comments when ordering.

Downloads

  • Windows® 11, 10, 8.1, 7, Vista, XP (32/64-Bit)
  • Mindestens 512 MB RAM und 1 GHz CPU
  • Internetanschluss
  • PC-CAN-Interface von PEAK-System

The_night_flier_il_volatore_notturno_1997-altad...

Visually, the film captures the lonely, liminal atmosphere of late-night aviation. The small-town airports, shrouded in fog and lit by flickering fluorescent bulbs, create a sense of isolation that mirrors Dees’s own psyche. The creature design, kept largely in the shadows until the final act, is genuinely grotesque—eschewing the romanticized "pretty boy" vampire trope of the 90s in favor of a bat-like, ancient horror.

The brilliance of the film lies in the parallel it draws between Dees and the vampire he is hunting. Dees is a psychic vampire; he feeds on the tragedies of others to fuel his headlines. He doesn’t just report on death; he photographs it with a voyeuristic glee, often rearranging crime scenes to make them "bleed" more for the camera. By the time he finally comes face-to-face with the supernatural killer, the audience is forced to wonder who the real monster is: the creature that kills for sustenance, or the man who profits from the carnage. The_Night_Flier_Il_Volatore_Notturno_1997-Altad...

In conclusion, The Night Flier is a sharp, cynical horror film that remains relevant in the era of clickbait and "fake news." It reminds us that while we might fear the monsters in the dark, we should be equally wary of those who shine a light on them just to sell a story. Visually, the film captures the lonely, liminal atmosphere

Mark Pavia’s 1997 film The Night Flier stands as one of the more underrated entries in the vast catalog of Stephen King adaptations. While many King films lean into the supernatural as a means of pure spectacle, The Night Flier uses the vampire mythos to craft a cynical, gritty commentary on the ethics of journalism and the rot of human curiosity. At its core, the film is less about a blood-sucking monster and more about the predatory nature of the "news" we consume. The brilliance of the film lies in the

The climax of the film serves as a hallucinatory descent into madness. Dees, trapped in a bathroom at a blood-soaked airport, is forced to confront the literal reflection of his own work. The ending is famously bleak, suggesting that in the world of tabloid media, the truth doesn't just hurt—it consumes you entirely. Dees becomes the very headline he sought to capture, a victim of his own insatiable hunger for the macabre.

The story follows Richard Dees (played with a masterful, misanthropic edge by Miguel Ferrer), a veteran reporter for The Inside View , a trashy supermarket tabloid. Dees is a man who has lost his soul to the "blood and guts" of sensationalism; his motto, "Never believe what you publish, and never publish what you believe," defines his nihilistic worldview. When a mysterious pilot—the titular "Night Flier"—begins landing a black Cessna at small rural airfields and leaving a trail of mutilated bodies, Dees smells a career-defining story.