• Celebrating our Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes crew for winning the Hollywood Professional Association - HPA Award for Outsta...
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    Celebrating our Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes crew for winning the Hollywood Professional Association - HPA Award for Outstanding Visual Effects - Live Action Feature! Congratulations to Erik Winquist, Danielle Immerman, Stephen Unterfranz, Phillip Leonhardt, Sean Noel Walker, and the entire team! #WtFX #VFX #HPAAwards
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  • Watch Untold Studios VFX breakdown for that walrus Virgin Media spot
    beforesandafters.com
    Digital walrus, digital boat, and digital water. View this post on InstagramA post shared by Untold Studios. (@untold_studios)The post Watch Untold Studios VFX breakdown for that walrus Virgin Media spot appeared first on befores & afters.
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  • See how JAMM orchestrated Josh Brolins interaction with an orangutan on Brothers
    beforesandafters.com
    Watch the JAMM VFX breakdown below.The post See how JAMM orchestrated Josh Brolins interaction with an orangutan on Brothers appeared first on befores & afters.
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  • Biggest Edition Yet of our URP E-Book for Unity 6 | Unity
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    The biggest edition yet of our URP e-book, now updated for your Unity 6 projects, is available to download: https://on.unity.com/4fvdcqPYou'll find a wealth of helpful instructions and example steps that you can apply directly in your project. This guide is especially helpful to those users migrating from the Built-In Render Pipeline who want to get the most out of the latest URP features.Dive into an A-Z coverage of all URP capabilities today!Unity 6 developers, technical artists, and graphics programmers now have all the updated URP key tips and techniques ready for them in one comprehensive guide.
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  • Grab our latest e-book, 5 fundamentals for creating web games, to learn best practices for building performant web games from ex...
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    Grab our latest e-book, 5 fundamentals for creating web games, to learn best practices for building performant web games from experts at Coatsink, Pigiama Kasama Company, Stratton Studios, and ULTRAHORSE. Get learning now: https://on.unity.com/40zrxhA
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  • Your body, my choice: Women face new surge of hate speech on X and TikTok following Trumps election victory
    www.fastcompany.com
    Its no surprise that a Trump victory would lead to an increase in online harassment and hate speech against women. Trump has attacked womens reproductive rights and access to abortion (which was on the ballot in 10 states this election), and used anxiety around masculinity as a key voting issue, often uttering sexist, crude insults on the campaign trail. Not to mention, he was found liable of sexual abuse.Now, it seems that for some, Trumps reelection is a hall pass for bad behavior.In both the days leading up to the election and after Trumps victory, women in the United States are facing a marked increase of online hate, harassment, and even denigration, according to new research from the Institute of Strategic Dialogue (ISD), aleading global think tank dedicated to safeguarding human rights.Online hate against women increased in the last presidential election in 2020, and again in the 2022 midterms. But now the manosphere, emboldened by a Trump win, is being louder than ever online with anti-women rhetoric that could extend into the next presidential election and beyond, says the ISD.The manosphere exists across social media on X and TikTok, on right-wing and conservative blogs and podcasts, and forums on Reddit, just to name a few, and promotes masculinity, attacking women, and questioning feminism.Whats changed in this election cycle? Male bloggers, podcasters, influencers, and public figures who used to identify as free-thinking pundits (or libertarians) bought into Trumpshyper-masculine appeal, openly supporting him and making Trump seem likable (think Joe Rogan, Shawn Ryan, Adin Ross, Andrew Schulz, Lex Fridman). And young men listened to these bros, first voting for Trump, and now, post-election, no longer feeling the need to moderate themselves.ISD researchers tracked comments across X, TikTok, forums, blogs, Reddit, and YouTube from October 1 to November 6 and found a spike in misogynist content in late October, just before the election, as well as an increase in posts calling to repeal the 19thAmendment (which gave women the right to vote in the U.S. in 1920).On the day after the election, phrases like your body, my choice, get back to the kitchen, and repeal the 19th exploded across platforms and have been growing ever since, according to the ISD.When asked about the surge in the use of these phrases, TikTok confirmed to Fast Company that the three phrases violate [our] Community Guidelines specifically under hate speechand content that includes those phrases are removed from the platform.Fast Company also reached out to X about the phrases.The trend is showing no signs of slowing. On Election Day, far-right Gen Z political podcaster and white supremacist Nick Fuentes fueled the fire when he posted on X, Your body, my choice. Forever. The post has since received over 35 million views. The phrase has carried over to TikTok and Facebook, where it appeared on 52,000 posts in a 24-hour period, and even into schools, with some posts showing boys chanting the phrases at girls.
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  • How extreme weather affects migration between the U.S. and Mexico
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    Extreme weather is contributing to undocumented migration and return between Mexico and the United States, suggesting that more migrants could risk their lives crossing the border as climate change fuels droughts, storms, and other hardships, according to a new study.People from agricultural areas in Mexico were more likely to cross the border illegally after droughts and were less likely to return to their original communities when extreme weather continued, according to research this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.Across the globe, climate changecaused by burning fossil fuels such as coal and natural gasis exacerbating extreme weather. Droughts are longer and drier, heat is deadlier and storms are rapidly intensifying and dumping record-breaking rain.In Mexico, a country of nearly 130 million people, drought has drained reservoirs dry, created severe water shortages, and drastically reduced corn production, threatening livelihoods.Researchers said Mexico is a notable country for studying the links between migration, return and weather stressors. Its mean annual temperature is projected to increase up to 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) by 2060, and extreme weather is likely to economically devastate rural communities dependent on rain-fed agriculture. The U.S. and Mexico also have the largest international migration flow in the world.Scientists predict migration will grow as the planet gets hotter. Over the next 30 years, 143 million people worldwide are likely to be uprooted by rising seas, drought, searing temperatures, and other climate catastrophes, according to a U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report.The new migration research comes as Republican Donald Trump was reelected to the U.S. presidency this week. Trump has called climate change a hoax and promised mass deportations of an estimated 11 million people in the U.S. illegally.Researchers said their findings highlight how extreme weather drives migration.Filiz Garip, a study researcher and professor of sociology and international affairs at Princeton University, said advanced nations have contributed far more to climate change than developing countries that are bearing the brunt.Migration is not a decision that people take up lightly . . . and yet theyre being forced to make it more, and theyre being forced to stay longer in the United States as a result of weather extremes, Garip said.The researchers analyzed daily weather data along with survey responses from 48,313 people between 1992 and 2018, focusing on about 3,700 individuals who crossed the border without documents for the first time.They looked at 84 agricultural communities in Mexico where growing corn was dependent on weather. They correlated a persons decision to migrate and then return with abnormal changes in temperature and rainfall in their origin communities during the May-to-August corn growing season.The study found communities experiencing drought had higher migration rates compared to communities with normal rainfall. And people were less likely to return to Mexico from the U.S. when their communities were unusually dry or wet. That was true for recent U.S. arrivals and people who had been there longer.People who were better off financially were also more likely to migrate. So were people from communities with established migration histories where friends, neighbors or family members who previously migrated could offer information and help.These social and economic factors that influence migration are well understood, but Garip said the studys findings underscore the inequities of climate adaptation. With extreme weather events, not everybody is impacted or responds in the same way, she said, and the typical social and economic advantages or disadvantages also shape how people experience these events.For Kerilyn Schewel, codirector of Duke Universitys Program on Climate, Resilience and Mobility, the economic factors highlight that some of most vulnerable people arent those displaced by climate extremes, but are rather trapped in place or lacking the resources to move.Schewel, who was not involved in the study, said analyzing regions with migration histories could help predict where migrants will come from and who is likelier to migrate because of climate shocks. In places where people are already leaving, where theres a high degree of migration prevalence, . . . thats where we can expect more people to leave in the future, she said.The survey data used from the Mexican Migration Project makes this study unique, according to Hlne Benveniste, a professor in Stanford Universitys department of environmental social sciences. Migration data of its scale thats community specific is rarely available, she said in an email. So is information about a persons full migration journey, including their return.The finding that return migration decisions were delayed by weather stress in origin communities is important and novel, said Benveniste, who studies climate-related human migration and was not involved in the study. Few datasets enable an analysis of this question.But increased surveillance and enforcement along the U.S.-Mexico border make returning homeand moving back and forthmore difficult, said Michael Mndez, assistant professor of environmental policy and planning at the University of California, Irvine. And once undocumented migrants are in the U.S., they often live in dilapidated housing, lack health care or work in industries such as construction or agriculture that make them vulnerable to other climate impacts, he said. Mndez was not involved in the study.As climate change threatens social, political, and economic stability around the world, experts said the study highlights the need for global collaboration around migration and climate resilience.So much of our focus has been, in a way, on the border and securing the border, said Schewel from Duke. But we need much more attention to not only the reasons why people are leaving, but also the demand for immigrant workers within the U.S.By Dorany Pineda, Associated PressThe Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of APs environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment.
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  • Aprdelesp forefronts "overlooked" electrical accessories in Mexico City exhibition
    www.dezeen.com
    Local studio Aprdelesp has showcased a line of electrical projects, including wall plugs and power cords, at Ago Projects gallery in Mexico City to forefront items it believes have historically been overlooked in design schemas.The exhibition was called Accesorios Especiales (Special Accessories) and showcased the launch of Aprdelesp's line of electrical accessories, designed to focus on an often neglected aspect of architectural planning, during Design Week Mexico.Aprdelesp has created an exhibition showcasing a line of electrical accessories"We are convinced that an electrical outlet can be equally important to a wall in determining, suggesting, or facilitating activities in the course of appropriation," the studio told Dezeen."In this sense, we recognize that electrical accessories are one of the many objects that architects usually ignore or overlook they are often treated as technical afterthoughts, hidden from view, positioned in standard locations, and represented in drawings by symbols that don't reflect their shape, color, or texture and as such, we were interested in developing a set of spatial accessories."It was hosted in Ago Projects gallery in Mexico CityArranged around Ago Project's gallery space in Mexico City's Reforma district, the primary feature was a colourful wall panel set with different functional attributes such as outlets, baskets, mirrors, hooks and plant holders.The panels are highly modular, with different shapes sizes and configurations of utilities.According to the studio, while electrical outlets are standard, the placements and format of these essential components do not always all look the same, and they designed the set within that potential for deviation from the norm.The show was meant to forefront an "overlooked" aspect of design"We believe that they stand out, among other things, because of their ambiguity, unusual proportions, and the fact that they integrate commercial objects that we didn't design ourselves," said the studio."However, beyond making the spatial accessories immediately noticeable, we are interested in inviting people to engage with them in a more open-ended manner: we believe that all these explorations allow the spatial accessories to function as unfinished objects."It included wall panels with outlets as well as furnitureBeyond the panels of varying colours and dimensions, the studio also designed a set of furniture that prioritises the accessories.These pieces included a low-lying coffee table with wheels equipped with a candle holder, a tall floor lamp with a base covered in outlets and a height-adjustable table with a built-in reading lamp.Whereas outlets are often included in furniture as an afterthought, the studio said this furniture was designed with the accessories first, forefronting their functions.Read: Mexican designers consider the house of the future at Design House"This is not a superficial difference in how we name things," said Aprdelesp."Working on this project, we have realized that designing a power extension where one can sit, for example, rather than a chair with a USB port, for example, truly provokes a different approach in the discussion, which ultimately leads to different outcomes."The wall panels come in multiple shapes, sizes, and colours, with different configurationsAprdelesp short for apropacin del espacio (appropriation of space) is a Mexico City-based architecture and research office.Other collectionsfocusing on architectural accessories include a setof "jewellery-like" light switches from Kelly Hopper and a collection of handles created by renowned designers for New York brand Petra.The photography is by Rocket Science.Accesorios Especiales is on show at Ago Projects from 5 October to 31 December. For more exhibitions, talks and fairs in architecture and design visit Dezeen Events Guide.The post Aprdelesp forefronts "overlooked" electrical accessories in Mexico City exhibition appeared first on Dezeen.
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  • Studio Gang places mass-timber buildings around concrete terrace in California
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    Architecture studio Studio Gang has completed an expansive extension at the California College of the Arts San Francisco campus, which includes exposed bracing and a concrete terrace.The 82,305 square foot (7,646 square metre) addition extends outwards from the college's main academic building and consists of buildings and courtyards encased in a large, elevated concrete terrace.Studio Gang has completed an extension at the California College of ArtsThis terrace acts as a ceiling to the building's ground-level program while providing an expansive outdoor space for three mass-timber "pavilions" that extend upwards at the sides of the plan, one of which remains unbuilt.Two "maker yards" were "carved" out of the terrace and reach down towards ground-level, where the entrance to the neighbouring building also lies.The extensions consists of buildings and courtyards that are encased in a large concrete terraceThe complex hosts a variety of art-making classrooms and studios for the California College of the Arts (CCA) campus, such as spaces for finishing and sandblasting, lithography and etching and a metal shop.Its many studios and spaces are meant to create a "dynamic environment", while incorporating green spaces for the campus.The addition sits next to the campus' main academic building"The design intends to create a dynamic environment for art and design education, while also inspiring new forms of making through unexpected interactions between disciplines," said Studio Gang founding partner Jeanne Gang.The building is square in form, and in plan, organised around the two rectangular courtyards, which are offset from each other at the complex's centre.An outdoor stair leads to the upper concrete deckThree, multi-storey mass-timber buildings the Irwin Pavilion, Hooper Pavilion and the future Seventh Street Pavilion are tucked around the terrace's perimeter and extend upwards through its concrete deck.The mass-timber buildings showcase an exposed, eccentric black-toned bracing system, which encircles the buildings in a cage-like skin.Two "maker courtyards" sit at ground-level"Their structures, which are among the first exposed mass timber structures in California and include a one-of-a-kind eccentric braced frame system, allow their natural materiality and lateral and gravity loads to be visible," said the studio.Behind the frame, the buildings are clad in diagonal wood panels and are fronted with loggias, which face the interior of the expansion.Read: Studio Gang converts tobacco warehouse into design studios for University of KentuckyAt ground level, below the terrace, the courtyard and interstitial spaces were clad in glass, and an exposed staircase across from campus's main building leads to the upper deck.Rectangular green spaces are distributed across the top of the terrace, while small gardens populate the interior courtyards.The interior hosts studios and classrooms for a variety of makingSustainable strategies were incorporated into the design, such as "self-shading faades and night-flush ventilation" according to the studio, while infrastructure is in place for a future "net-positive" system.The mass-timber structure also reduces the building's impact to almost half of a "typical" building, according to the studio.A third building in the complex remains unbuilt"The hybrid mass timber structure and minimal finishes reduce the building's embodied carbon footprint by almost half that of a typical baseline building," said the studio."I'm excited to see how our addition to CCA's campus shapes the future of art and design, and adds to San Francisco's storied creative community," added Gang.Other recent projects by Studio Gang include a residential tower in San Francisco's Mission Rock neighborhood and a hotel in Denver with a facade informed by tree bark.The photography is by Jason O'RearProject credits:Owner's representative: Dovetail Construction Project Management,Associate architect: TEF DesignSustainability consultant: Atelier TenStructural engineering and acoustics engineer: ArupMEP/FP engineer: MEYERS+Landscape architect: Surfacedesign IncCivil engineer: Lotus WaterLighting designer: Pritchard Peck,Wayfinding and signage: Public designCode, fire, and life safety consultant: Coffman EngineersThermal and waterproofing consultant: Thornton TomasettDry utility consultant: Urban Design Consulting EngineersGeneral contractor: Hathaway Dinwiddie Construction CompanyThe post Studio Gang places mass-timber buildings around concrete terrace in California appeared first on Dezeen.
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