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Videos (158) | Sift Talk (4) | Blogs (10) | Comments (377) |
Videos (158) | Sift Talk (4) | Blogs (10) | Comments (377) |
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Xbox One versus/vs. Nintendo 64
Yes, and vibrating controllers. I wasn't a console fan back then. I only owned Atari 2600 and borrowed a Turbo Graphx 16 for a week.
Never got the hype around GoldenEye.
Played it on a friends N64 and it felt like an ok FPS, but wasn't really that memorable. Is it just because it was the first decent console FPS?
Not For Astronauts...
He farted into the rock...the rock vibrated...moon creature felt fissure
That's my main gripe. Moon creatures wouldn't have evolved audition.
Not For Astronauts...
But selenites would develop acute sensitivity to acoustic vibrations transmitted through the regolith. Good luck bunny hopping back to the safety of you lander, Lander Calrissian.
Upright Bass Player Being Filmed at High Shutter Speed
vibrations are random, this is oscillation
*oscillation
Upright Bass Player Being Filmed at High Shutter Speed
It's not really technically * timeshift as such, as the video isn't slowed down -the vibrations of the strings are frozen from high shutter speeds.
Fascinating stuff, though.
deathcow
(Member Profile)
I thought it was related, but that's not the whole story either since obviously if you hook your doorbell's solonoid to an AC current the striker will just sit and vibrate in place rather than shooting out and dinging the bell.
Starting to get a bit off-topic though.
Look up magnetic blowout.
The plasma moves because of the magnetic fields. I think, just like when you energize a coil and a metal rod moves one direction to ring a doorbell.
Van Jones: Let's Stop Trying to Please Republicans
Is it the same thing as a vibrating rabbit? Because that's what came to my mind first....
How do you not know what a mechanical bunny is?
The Absolutely Stunning Dance of the Peacock Spider
Can YOU vibrate your asshole!?
To add to this - cant build a rocket to take itself to the moon, can it?
Can it build highways?
Can it create penicillin?
Can it program?
Can it construct a skyscraper?
Can it produce electricity?
Can it study q-bits?
Can it protect itself from mortein? Or my boot?
Its a fucking spider with a vibrating asshole. Describing it as having immense knowledge is a spit in the face to all of humanities achievements.
The Absolutely Stunning Dance of the Peacock Spider
To add to this - cant build a rocket to take itself to the moon, can it?
Can it build highways?
Can it create penicillin?
Can it program?
Can it construct a skyscraper?
Can it produce electricity?
Can it study q-bits?
Can it protect itself from mortein? Or my boot?
Its a fucking spider with a vibrating asshole. Describing it as having immense knowledge is a spit in the face to all of humanities achievements.
"The video you are about to see should open your eyes to the immense knowledge that other species possess and that only they will ever know."
Bullshit. It's a fucking spider.
It's a cool looking spider, with an interesting evolved mating ritual, but it doesn't possess "immense knowledge". It has a brain that's around the size of a grain of sand.
TEDTalks | Beardyman: The polyphonic me
It's cool and impressive and so on, but I'm still not sure what the point is?
He talks about being able to replicate "the sound in his head". Ok, cool. Musicians have been trying to do that for years. Electric guitarists, for instance, can spend hours/weeks/months tweaking settings on a dizzying array of gear to produce the sound they want. But ultimately, the expression of the music still comes from the guitar, from the physical manipulation and vibration of the strings.
I have no problem with Beardyman using his voice as an instrument, or even manipulating it, looping it or whatever. But surely there comes a point where the manipulation is so extreme that the "source" is lost, i.e. there is nothing about the output that is affected by the input. At which point, I have to ask, why bother with voice as an input in the first place? Why not just use a wave generator?
Actually, I think I might have answered my own question. I guess it's the fact that his voice is an easily manipulatable starting point.
Brian Williams Raps Young MC’s “Bust A Move”
*related=http://videosift.com/video/Brian-Williams-Raps-Warren-Gs-Regulate
*related=http://videosift.com/video/Brian-Williams-Raps-Marky-Marks-Good-Vibrations
*related=http://videosift.com/video/Brian-Williams-Raps-Snoop-Dogg-Jimmy-Fallon
Brian Williams Raps Young MC’s “Bust A Move”
Brian Williams Raps Warren G's "Regulate" has been added as a related post - related requested by Trancecoach.
Brian Williams Raps Marky Mark's "Good Vibrations" has been added as a related post - related requested by Trancecoach.
Brian Williams Raps Snoop Dogg (Jimmy Fallon) has been added as a related post - related requested by Trancecoach.
Brian Williams Raps Warren G's "Regulate"
Brian Williams Raps Marky Mark's "Good Vibrations" has been added as a related post - related requested by Trancecoach on that post.
Brian Williams Raps Snoop Dogg (Jimmy Fallon)
Brian Williams Raps Marky Mark's "Good Vibrations" has been added as a related post - related requested by Trancecoach on that post.
1936 Fairbanks Morse Model 32D
This beast maintains her appeal for a few reasons-The ones that are left still run as they did when they were manufactured(they're brick-shithouses in the durability/reliability categories) and like most simply-designed diesel engines maintain their dependability-Combine these with the enthusiastic appeal of our collective industrial heritage and the vibrating ground beneath her pad when she's purring and you have a recipe for an unquenchable, historically relevant enthusiasm.
Did I mention they'll run forever??
"The Indian Grave Drainage District in Quincy, Illinois still has three operational Model 32 engines, and three engines are on standby as back-up power generators in Delta, Colorado."
That's impressive and disturbing at the same time. I know the old stuff is often more reliable and cheaper to acquire, but surely a surplus tank engine from the boneyard would be easier to maintain.