Special effects before green screen and CGI pic.twitter.com/5bxFGJMe0O
— Steve Stewart-Williams (@SteveStuWill) January 22, 2022

Special effects before green screen and CGI pic.twitter.com/5bxFGJMe0O
— Steve Stewart-Williams (@SteveStuWill) January 22, 2022
Styrofoam balls reacting to different sound frequencies.
Remember, everything is frequency.
— Brian Roemmele (@BrianRoemmele) November 13, 2021
This is one of my absolute favorite sounds. This is the sound of a helicopter flying on Mars. We used this sound to actually understand the propagation of sound in general through the Martian atmosphere, and it turns out that we were totally wrong with our models. The Martian atmosphere can propagate sound a lot further than we thought it could.
(via kottke)
Ich bin sehr beliebt: pic.twitter.com/R1x267MeRE
— Kerstin Brune (@BruneKerstin) October 8, 2021
Ein Pic davon hatte ich hier schon, jetzt mehrere und noch näher dran an dem Steinehaufen.






(via pieklo)
"I put my 30-second video in a glitch generator, over and over, to see what might happen: over time, colours disappeared; the length of the video got shorter, until it was at 0 seconds—an unrecognizable thing, a still photo."
—Laura Kerr (@laurakerrart): pic.twitter.com/TlpPRrIRtL
— Christian Bok (@christianbok) September 8, 2021
Wieder was in der KI-Reihe nichtexistenter Dinge – diesmal computergenerierte Strände. Aus 25 Millionen Fotos von Stränden generiert der Algorithmus neue Fotos.
This beach does not exist

The video shows the learning process of the network. The learning progress is measured in kimg (kilo images). The network was trained for 25,000 kimg (until it had seen 25,000,000 images).
(via kfm)