search results matching tag: fps
» channel: learn
go advanced with your query
Search took 0.001 seconds
Videos (521) | Sift Talk (6) | Blogs (44) | Comments (968) |
Videos (521) | Sift Talk (6) | Blogs (44) | Comments (968) |
Not yet a member? No problem!
Sign-up just takes a second.
Forgot your password?
Recover it now.
Already signed up?
Log in now.
Forgot your password?
Recover it now.
Not yet a member? No problem!
Sign-up just takes a second.
Remember your password?
Log in now.
Space Station Transit 2017 ECLIPSE, My Brain Stopped Working
Dude, that ISS went fast!! It is good thing they had high FPS!
I wonder if they noticed anything different with the farm animals.
iaui
(Member Profile)
Your video, .38 Special vs Prince Ruperts Drop at 170,000 FPS SmrtEvrDa, has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
.38 Special vs Prince Ruperts Drop at 170,000 FPS SmrtEvrDa
This video Destin does on the structure of the Prince Rupert Drop is really interesting.
https://videosift.com/video/Glass-Exploding-at-130-000-fps-aka-Prince-Ruperts-Drop
Declassified Nuclear Test
According to Ars Technica, it's 2,400 FPS.
https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2017/03/these-recently-declassified-nuclear-test-videos-are-utterly-mesmerizing-terrifying/
How many million fps is that!?
Declassified Nuclear Test
How many million fps is that!?
What is Gerrymandering
The thumbnail image for this video has been updated - thumbnail added by eric3579.

1000 degree Red Hot Rocket Knife
Man, do I hate TLAs
(AKA: Three Letter Acronyms)
FPS
A). Frames Per Second
B). First Person Shooter
C). Food Process Solution
D). Fires Per Second
E). Federal Protective Service
F). Forest Products Society
G). Financial Processing Solutions
H). Fire Protection Systems
I). Food Pharma Systems
J). Foundation Plant Services
K). Federation of Petroleum Suppliers
L). Foundation Public School
M). Fancy Play Syndrome
N). Feet Per Second
O). Fair Play System
P). French Parts Service
Q). Fedorki Performance Systems
R). Fluid Property Sensor
S). Farmington Public Schools
T). Foot-Pound-Second
U). FairPlay Streaming
V). Family Pairwise Search
W). Forum on Physics and Society
X). Forensic Psychological Services
Y). Future Problem Solving
Z). ALL OF THE ABOVE
*Hint: the answer is Z.
(And yes, every one of these are real things that use this TLA.)
I'm going to be disappointed if the 1000 degree Red Hot Rocket Knife Gun doesn't show up in a FPS sometime in the near future.
1000 degree Red Hot Rocket Knife
I'm going to be disappointed if the 1000 degree Red Hot Rocket Knife Gun doesn't show up in a FPS sometime in the near future.
Bullet vs Prince Rupert's Drop - Smarter Every Day
Glass Exploding at 130,000 fps (aka Prince Rupert's Drop) has been added as a related post - related requested by PlayhousePals.
Bullet vs Prince Rupert's Drop - Smarter Every Day
*related=http://videosift.com/video/Glass-Exploding-at-130-000-fps-aka-Prince-Ruperts-Drop
behind the scenes:
Fantomas
(Member Profile)
Your video, Football to the face at 28,000 fps - The Slow Mo Guys, has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
Don't Mix Coke with Liquid Nitrogen
Wow this is like low budget FPS Russia guy mixed with even lower budget Backyard Science guy.
Nuclear waste convoy stuck in my neighborhood.
OK. The next that @ant said was:
"No, it was Rick and Daryl!"
I haven't watched WD in a while, but to me it wasn't that funny, although it would make things interesting.
After that he said he plays at 15 fps, which is a bit funny, and since then it's just been tagging and flagging, making the sift a better place.
All in all, FR, you're right. He's not that funny. Let me get the insecticide.
TOTALLY HILARIOUS!
Hey, everybody! Look at this guy! He's super funny! Everyone pay attention to him, I bet the next thing he says will be even better. Let's watch!
A PC Gamer's Worst Nightmare
*geeks

Pfffbt, I played at 15 FPS.
Are You Ready To Be Outpaced By Machines? Quantum Computing
I was hoping for more meat to his presentation, and was disappointed. I feel that he said absolutely nothing to help anyone in the audience understand what quantum computers actually DO or what sort of problems they'll help to solve. They'll absolutely not increase your FPS, as that's not what they're well-suited to do. What they are quite excellent at is taking a problem with many possible solutions and finding the correct (or best) one at an extremely high speed.
One example would be the Traveling Salesman problem. In brief, find the optimum route for traversing a number of points on a map. This is useful for things like scheduling package delivery routes, airline flights, etc. With a classic / current computer we write software that cleverly chugs through the possible solutions, throws out any that prove to be poor, and eventually gets to what appears to be the best or is at least a "good enough" solution. As the number of necessary points to be visited increases this problem scales in complexity quickly, so eventually a current computer would just choke on the problem and at best return an ok-ish solution in a reasonable period of time.
A quantum computer is a totally different beast. If it's "big" enough (IE, is comprised of a sufficient number of qubits), it takes the entire set of all possible solutions to the problem, and rather than iterate through them to find the best one, it checks them all simultaneously and immediately returns the optimum solution. It does this by using properties of quantum mechanics, and I think this is where the speaker was drawing his talk of parallel universes. If there are 3 qubits, they would exist as 000, 001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110, and 111 simultaneously. The software would then define what the best answer would look like, and the computer returns the answer.
You can hopefully see how this totally breaks encryption. With a current computer and a long enough encryption key, an encoded message would take the fastest machines a huge number of years to decipher. With a quantum computer you hand it a gibberish encrypted message, it loads all possible transformations of that message simultaneously, and it then returns the transformation which looks most like a coherent message.
I'm excited to see what these machines can do for us, but they're going to necessitate some significant structural changes in how we handle sensitive data.