Ax’s lame movie recos and cool YT picks
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@Axtremus said in Ax’s lame movie recos and cool YT picks:
Be sure to see the part where a liquid nitrogen cooled steel ball is pressed again the 2010 armor. Very dramatic ending!
The technology improvement is interesting, but also sad.
I am sure that there are weapon designers out there looking at super-cooled ammunition to use against armor.
(BTW, they were lucky no one was injured or hurt)
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The Erodium Copy "robot."
Link to video
A very simple idea, all biodegradable, seems to have large potential.
Many times the narration oversells the idea, try to overlook that. -
Watching this during a meeting (shhh) so had the video off. How is this an improvement over just dropping seeds?
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This is new:
Link to video -
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That was cool
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I have always been curious about how one manufactures those "a solid object inside a solid frame" trinkets where it appears that the solid object inside should have been impossible to fit inside the frame. Now that I have watched this video ...
Link to video... I am still not sure how such trinkets are made.
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@Axtremus said in Ax’s lame movie recos and cool YT picks:
I have always been curious about how one manufactures those "a solid object inside a solid frame" trinkets where it appears that the solid object inside should have been impossible to fit inside the frame. Now that I have watched this video ...
Link to video... I am will not sure how such trinkets are made.
They take a solid block of wood, then remove the wood that isn't the captive ball in sphere.
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Just something that I never thought about, thus interesting for me to see how it can be done.
Link to video -
Somewhat related, but the story of a kid that has no arms but was able to get a driver license.
Go to about 10:00 minutes in the below video
Link to video -
Life size silicon doll buyer’s guide:
Link to videoSkeletal construction, from TPE (cheaper, less durable, less lifelike) to silicon (more expensive, more durable, more lifelike), details like wigs vs. “implanted” hair, variable firmness for different parts of the doll, etc. Brief discussion on buyers’ psychology. A rather comprehensive guide given the length of the video.
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Link to video
One person singing two tones at the same time.
Interesting and impressive, but not exactly pleasant, rather weird. She demonstrates usage in a folk tune near the end, but I cannot yet imagine how to use that effectively in compositions.
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"Overtone singing" has a rich history going back hundreds of years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overtone_singing
@Axtremus said in Ax’s lame movie recos and cool YT picks:
I cannot yet imagine how to use that effectively in compositions
If you want to learn how to do it, here's something to get you started.
Link to video -