That was absolutely incredible. *claps*
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That was absolutely incredible. *claps*
I saw something very similar [well, exactly similar] to this in a physics video in high school. It was about 30 minutes long and took place in a gigantic warehouse. And believe it or not, it was even more complex than this. I wish I could recall the name of the video, but I really want to get it someday. Most incredible thing I ever witnessed. I don't think the coming of Christ would amaze me more than that video did.
The creators also seemed rather fond of tires.
Very cool ad. That muffler almost didn't make it.
Very cool but the tire action looks like CG. No way anything rolls uphill without a definite amount of force applied to it. Sending it to my friend, thanks for the link.
edit: I would also say that the part with the seat flipping back is fake as well. Just looks too smooth with that constant angular velocity.:)
The Way Things Go by Peter Fischli and David Weiss, as stated in the above linked article?Quote:
Originally posted by Click_Stick
I saw something very similar [well, exactly similar] to this in a physics video in high school. It was about 30 minutes long and took place in a gigantic warehouse. And believe it or not, it was even more complex than this. I wish I could recall the name of the video, but I really want to get it someday. Most incredible thing I ever witnessed. I don't think the coming of Christ would amaze me more than that video did.
That's freaking cool.
Screw me silly. I was too busy watching and didn't bother to read that jabber at the bottom. Yuh, that's it.Quote:
Originally posted by MechDeus
The Way Things Go by Peter Fischli and David Weiss, as stated in the above linked article?
. .
That was awesome.
Wow.
Awesome.
Part of that was CG'ed, to merge 2 long strings into 1.Quote:
Originally posted by Click_Stick
Very cool ad. That muffler almost didn't make it.