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WWW.YOUTUBE.COMBlue Pill #b3dBlue pill matrix sci-fi concept art created using the Random Flow add-on in Blender. Shops: blendermarket.com/creators/blenderguppy gumroad.com/blenderguppy Patreon: patreon.com/blenderguppy #b3d #conceptart #blender3d #blenderaddon #blendermarket0 Reacties 0 aandelen 156 Views
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WWW.YOUTUBE.COMFoggy Brutal architecture scene in blender timelapse with some tipsDownloads: texture folders: https://blendermarket.com/products/texture-folders?ref=311 decal designer: https://blendermarket.com/products/texture-decal-designer?ref=311 Quick decals addon: https://blendermarket.com/products/quick-decals?ref=311 asset library addon: https://blendermarket.com/products/the-asset-library?ref=311 the blender cloth library addon https://blendermarket.com/products/the-blender-cloth-library-addon-?ref=311 Download this project files @ patreon.com/topchannel1on1 my portfolio: cgtrader.com/esmilesvfx main channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TopChannel1on1/videos 2nd channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-6vHjpfo62aJpQk_n9siUw Awesome addons i use and recommend: simplyCloth addon: https://blendermarket.com/products/simply-cloth?ref=311 puresky comes with lens flares now: https://blendermarket.com/products/pure-sky?ref=3110 Reacties 0 aandelen 159 Views
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WWW.DISCOVERMAGAZINE.COMWhat Did Dinosaurs Taste Like? Probably Not Like ChickenIf an expansive Mesozoic menu was laid out in front of you, what would you order? Tyranno tenders or triceratops-burgers with triple cheese? Would you go for a slow-cooked stegosaurus steak or the velociraptor ribs — the Cretaceous fast-food option? Determining what dinosaurs tasted like is not an easy question to answer.“I don’t know if you can really say too much definitively about it,” says David Varricchio, a paleontologist at Montana State University.But there may be some clues about the taste of them — after all, we eat dinosaurs all the time, whether it’s Thanksgiving dinner turkey or chicken dino nuggets. Varricchio says that what we can infer about dinosaur taste is mostly based on factors like their diet, physiology, and what species they were related to.Did Dinosaurs Taste Like Chicken?“The cheap and easy take” about the taste of dinosaurs is that they’d likely taste like chicken, says Nick Longrich, a paleontologist and evolutionary biologist at the University of Bath in England.Both he and Varricchio point to the case of alligator meat, which is a little like chicken, for example. But Longrich still doubts that dinosaurs would taste like chicken for several reasons. For starters, “not even all chicken tastes like chicken,” he says, referencing the difference in flavor between light and dark meat.If by chicken, most people think of the white breast meat, it’s still unlikely that other types of dinosaurs tasted like it. Plus, even other birds like duck or turkey taste a little different than chicken, so there is no reason to think that other dinosaurs would taste more like chicken, Longrich says.Taste of Red MeatHumans have been farming some of the largest birds on our planet for some time, and the taste of ostrich or emu is more like red meat, Varricchio says, as opposed to turkey and chicken, which are roughly more like each other than either is to ostrich or emu.Some of the more active dinosaurs that relied on speed and running, for example, might have had meat that tasted a little more like ostrich or emu due to a similar physiology.What Did Large, Slower-Moving Dinosaurs Taste Like?It’s more difficult to guess what triceratops or stegosaurus might have tasted like. These creatures — or even large sauropods — typically have slower metabolisms than fast-moving theropods.Since they would have had less burst activity, they may have tasted more like alligator, Varricchio says, or even pork.Longrich says that some dinosaurs would have likely had more of a red meat flavor. “Spinosaurus, for example, was aquatic, so it may have had very high amount of myoglobin to store oxygen in its tissues, the way whales, seals, and otters do,” he says. Myoglobin is a protein usually found in red meat, and the amount of it can have a big effect on taste.In these large, slow-moving creatures, age may also have played a factor in the taste of their meat, in the same way that veal tastes different from other beef, or the way that lamb tastes different from mutton.Tasting Herbivores vs. CarnivoresThe diet of dinosaurs likely also played a role in their taste. In the same way that grass-fed beef might taste different from corn-fed beef, creatures that ate certain types of plants may vary from other dinosaurs that feasted on other vegetation.Most of the meat humans eat comes from plant eating or omnivorous species — our typical meat doesn’t usually eat meat. “Bears that eat a lot of berries, for example, are supposed to be tastier than those eating a lot of fish,” Longrich says, adding that baboons, which eat lots of fruits “have an incredibly sweet, succulent meat.”The trouble for dinosaur meat was many fruits didn’t exist in the Mesozoic. Grass hadn’t even taken off when non-bird dinosaurs were around — herbivores mostly would have eaten ferns, conifers, and cycads.“How does that affect the taste? Hard to say,” Longrich says. “I have never had beef fed on ferns and conifers.”It’s even harder to tell what a carnivore like Tyrannosaurus rex would have tasted like. Varricchio notes that some research has found evidence of individual T. rexes having parasitic fungus infections. Whether that would have infused a Tyranno-steak with a mushroom or yeast flavor is unclear, but it would probably be best to avoid that dinner altogether.Regardless of some of the guesses we can make about the taste of certain types of dinosaurs, it’s likely that they were just as diverse — if not more so — than the taste of bird meat, or mammal meat, today.“You’re dealing with over 100 million years, a huge range of species with different lifestyles, and diets that range from more primitive plants like ferns and cycads and conifers, to more flowering plants and fruit towards the end,” Longrich says.Article SourcesOur writers at Discovermagazine.com use peer-reviewed studies and high-quality sources for our articles, and our editors review for scientific accuracy and editorial standards. Review the sources used below for this article:American Museum of Natural History. Types of DinosaursJoshua Rapp Learn is an award-winning D.C.-based science writer. An expat Albertan, he contributes to a number of science publications like National Geographic, The New York Times, The Guardian, New Scientist, Hakai, and others.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 141 Views
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WWW.POPSCI.COMHow to brew the best pour-over coffee, according to scienceLess is more, when it comes to coffee beans. Credit: Deposit Photos Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Brewing coffee is a part of many people’s mundane, everyday routines. But you don’t necessarily need to pay exorbitant prices for premium roasts if you want to improve what’s in your cup. Sometimes, all that’s required is a basic understanding of the pour-over method’s interplay between molecular chemistry, physics, and fluid dynamics. Don’t worry—it’s not as complex as it sounds. At least, not according to a study published by University of Pennsylvania researchers on April 8 in Physics of Fluids. To better understand the microscopic interactions and internal dynamics that occur during pour-over brewing, the team first swapped opaque coffee grounds for silica gel particles inside a glass cone. They then used a laser sheet and a high-speed camera to capture in detail how fine-grained materials like ground coffee respond to water poured from a standard gooseneck kettle at various heights and strengths. It soon became clear that the best pour-over coffee requires generating an avalanche effect in the grains—an outcome best achieved by a combination of height and intensity. “What we recommend is making the pour height as high as possible, while still maintaining a laminar flow, where the jet doesn’t break up when it impacts the coffee grinds,” study co-author Ernest Park explained in a statement. Pouring a steady stream at a greater height allows grounds to displace and recirculate as the water pushes deeper into the coffee bed. The study authors also noted that although this method often produces a layer of floating grains on top of the water, the effect doesn’t “significantly impact” the mixing. But what can negatively affect brewing is when water hits the grounds is too thin or has a weak jet. The researchers’ coffee equipment and coffee experiment notebook. Credit: Arnold Mathijssen, et al. “If you have a thin jet, then it tends to break up into droplets. That’s what you want to avoid in these pour-overs, because that means the jet cannot mix the coffee grounds effectively,” added co-author Margot Young. “Together, these results indicate that the extraction of the coffee can be tuned by prolonging the mixing time with slower but more effective pours using avalanche dynamics,” the team summarizes in their study. Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. Adopting this strategy won’t only improve your cup of coffee—it’s the more environmentally responsible thing to do. Humans consume tens of billions of pounds of coffee every year, but the overall industry simply isn’t sustainable at its current rate. Climate change already endangers huge portions of global coffee cultivation, particularly in regions like Ethiopia and Brazil. Science-backed brewing like Park and Young’s pour-over method not only makes a more flavorful and enjoyable coffee, but does so using fewer beans. “Instead of increasing the amount of beans, the sensory profile and the strength of the beverage can be adjusted by varying the flow rate and the pour height,” they write. “In this way, the extraction efficiency could be better controlled to help alleviate the demand on coffee beans worldwide.”0 Reacties 0 aandelen 113 Views
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WWW.NATURE.COMAsilomar conference took courage and foresight — today, inclusivity would also be crucialNature, Published online: 08 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01009-yThe 50th anniversary of a landmark biosafety conference is an opportunity to ensure its spirit lives on in today’s scientists.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 129 Views
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WWW.LIVESCIENCE.COM'If it weren't for that asteroid, they might still share this planet': Dinosaurs weren't doomed before the asteroid hit, new study suggestsThe dinosaurs were not in decline before the asteroid hit, a new study finds. Instead, poor fossilization conditions and unexposed late Cretaceous rock layers mean they're either not preserved or hard to find.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 126 Views
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I.REDD.ITAm I wrong to mention donating in my 6+ hour free blender course?I love Blender’s open source nature. My career is built on me getting free training over the internet when I was a teen. It started everything! That’s why I publish training for free online. I spend more than full-time hours to try and make it great. I don’t want a financial barrier to someone growing up with little opportunities. I want them to express their creativity. To make their game/film. I tailor my tutorials to people with lower end hardware, and use older graphics cards so I can show what can be achieved on a budget rig. Some countries charge a fortune in taxes just for basic hardware! I barely survive on donations I get (far less than minimum wage in my country). In your opinion, am I wrong for plugging my Patreon in my free courses? Does this annoy you? I mention it briefly over a 6.5 hour training. I could just never mention it ever, but if I make less than I do now, I stop making videos (probably should already, if I was responsible). 🙃 submitted by /u/RileyBrown3D [link] [comments]0 Reacties 0 aandelen 127 Views
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X.COMGame developer @artem_sini39436 showcased a multiperspective system he created for his retrofuturistic action game Chrome Shift, combining top-down an...Game developer @artem_sini39436 showcased a multiperspective system he created for his retrofuturistic action game Chrome Shift, combining top-down and 2.5D gameplay using Unity.See more: https://80.lv/articles/developer-combines-top-down-2-5d-gameplay-in-their-unity-game/0 Reacties 0 aandelen 232 Views
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X.COMRT HUXLEY®: Cool guys don't look at explosionsRT HUXLEY®Cool guys don't look at explosions0 Reacties 0 aandelen 181 Views