• The Ray Student short film
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    The Ray Student short filmThe Ray - 2024 Graduation Film from ArtFX Schoolhttps://adapt.one/editorial/link/250/The+Ray+%E2%80%93+Student+short+film/
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  • Wikipedia picture of the day for November 29
    en.wikipedia.org
    The Rose of Persia; or, The Story-Teller and the Slave, is a two-act comic opera, with music by Arthur Sullivan and a libretto by Basil Hood. It premiered at the Savoy Theatre on 29 November 1899, closing on 28 June 1900 after a profitable run of 211 performances. The opera then toured, had a brief run in America and played elsewhere throughout the English-speaking world.Painting credit: Dudley Hardy; restored by Adam CuerdenRecently featured: Ocellated turkeyMary JacksonIce eggsArchiveMore featured pictures
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  • On this day: November 29
    en.wikipedia.org
    November 29: Black Friday in the United States (2024); Liberation Day in AlbaniaScreenshot of a game of Pong1781 The crew of the British slave ship Zong, running low on water, began the killing of more than 130 enslaved African people by throwing them into the sea to claim insurance.1810 Napoleonic Wars: British troops rendezvoused at Grand Baie to launch an invasion of Isle de France, now known as Mauritius.1924 The Bronx County Bird Club was formed and would go on to lead the Audubon Society's Christmas Bird Count in the eastern US for three years in a row.1963 Five minutes after taking off from MontralDorval, Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight831 crashed in bad weather, killing all 118 people on board.1972 Atari announced the release of Pong (screenshot pictured), one of the first video games to achieve widespread popularity in both the arcade and home-console markets.2012 In resolution 67/19, the United Nations General Assembly voted to accord the status of a non-member observer state to Palestine.Christian Doppler (b.1803)George Brown (b.1818)Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (b.1908)Yichi Masuzoe (b.1948)More anniversaries: November 28November 29November 30ArchiveBy emailList of days of the yearAbout
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  • Ask The Trainer SPECIAL | December 5th, 2024
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    Dec 5 | Join us for another exciting #AskTheTrainer session as #Cinema4D Master Trainer Noseman answers your questions- LIVE!Join us for an exciting SPECIAL, as C4D Master Trainer Noseman is going to answer your questions live. But whats so special about that? You will see
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  • Episode 4 Rendering Cinema 4D Fundamentals: Makin Waffles
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    LIVE NOW on #CreateWithMaxon Get comfortable with Redshifts render settings. Focus on the key concepts that ensure your projects are optimized for quality and speed. Explore techniques to fine-tune your render, including Depth of Field (Bokeh), Motion Blur, and PostFX, and learn the importance of sampling and global illumination (GI) to balance high-quality with efficient render times. DOWNLOAD FREE PROJECT FILES HERE! https://maxonvfx.com/files_c4d_fundamentals In this episode youll get comfortable with Redshifts render setting...
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  • How I Imitate Natures Voices | Snow Raven | TED
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    How I Imitate Natures Voices | Snow Raven | TED
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  • Six Cars Raced to the Finish Line of the U.S.'s First Automobile Raceat Speeds of Seven Miles Per Hour
    www.smithsonianmag.com
    J. Frank Duryea and his American-made "motocycle" won first place in the Chicago Times-Herald race on November 28, 1895. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons On Thanksgiving Day 1895, six cars lined up near Chicagos Jackson Park to compete in the first automobile race held in the United States. Given the frigid conditions30 degrees Fahrenheit and deep snowonly two were destined to finish the 54-mile round trip to Evanston and back. The average speed of the winner was seven miles per hour.Despite these quaint statistics, Americas first car race was full of hope, drama and significance for the development of the nations nascent automobile industry.This American story really begins in France in June 1895, with one of the world's first automobile races. Participants had 100 hours to make it back and forth between Paris and Bordeaux. The fastest cara two-seater with a gasoline enginefinished in just 48 hours.The race stimulated great interest in cars and racing in the U.S., writes historian James Flink in The Automobile Age. Patents related to motor vehicles skyrocketed, and less than a month afterward, the Chicago Times-Herald announced that it would sponsor the first-ever American car race that November.The Times-Herald race was the brainchild of newspaper publisher Herman H. Kohlsaat. Inspired by the French, Kohlsaat wanted to promote American automobiles, which he believed would soon outstrip horse and carriage travel, while also celebrating the 50th anniversary of his own paper.The automobile industry was still so new that the papers editors didnt know what to call the vehicles that would be racing. Names under consideration included the Horseless Carriage, Vehicle Motor, Automobile, Automobile Carriage and the eventual winner, Motocycle (not motorcycle).The race was originally set to run between Chicago and Milwaukee, with a prize of $2,000 for the winner (around $75,000 today). But poor road conditions in Wisconsin prompted the organizers to settle for a more modest 54-mile round trip from Chicago to Evanston, Illinois."Second City Firsts": The History Of The First Automobile Race In AmericaWatch on A storm the night before the race blanketed the roads with six inches of snow, prompting most of the 83 registered drivers to drop out of the competition. Just six cars made it to the starting line on the citys South Side.Four of the cars were gasoline-fueled; three were manufactured by Karl Benz, the German namesake of Mercedes-Benz, and the fourth was made by the Duryea Motor Wagon Company of Springfield, Massachusetts. The other two cars were electric, racing not as serious contenders but instead to show off the capabilities of electric motors.At 9 a.m., the six motocycles took off, though not at the thrilling high speeds that modern racing audiences crave. As they chugged along toward Evanston, each car had to make room not only for its driver, but also a race umpire to ensure they stayed on the course.Along the way, the Duryea lost one of its big rubber tires, and the attendants stopped to tie the big circular tube onto the wheel with ropes, the Chicago Chronicle reported. One machine was wrecked by a frightened horse, and its driver and umpire were thrown into a heap of snow on the roadside. Another driver lost control of his vehicle and was crushed in the rear of a streetcar.Only two cars finished the race. At 8:53 p.m., after more than ten hours on the road and nearly an hour of repairs, the American-made Duryea motocycle, driven by J. Frank Duryea, crossed the finish line. Second place went to a Benz car sponsored by Hieronymus Mueller & Company of Decatur, Illinois, and driven by Charles B. King.The American-made cars victory was a huge boon to the countrys automobile industry.A better test of the utility of road machines could not have been made, Kohlsaat later said, noting the inclement conditions and celebrating the Duryeas victory. I feel assured that the beginning has been made in a new method of transportation.Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.Filed Under: American History, Cars, Chicago, Games and Competition, Newspapers, On This Day in History, Thanksgiving, Transportation
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  • Mysterious, Repetitive 'Quacking' Noise in the Southern Ocean May Have Been a Conversation Between Whales
    www.smithsonianmag.com
    Researchers used a line array of hydrophones towed behind a ship for three weeks in the 1980s. They collected data nonstop, listening to all the sounds in the ocean. One such sound was the enigmatic "quacking" that one expert now says might represent a conversation. Ross ChapmanThe ocean is full of many unknowns, including the mysterious sounds that often come from the deep. For instance, a mechanical-sounding noise near the Mariana trench and a lonely whale making calls at the unique frequency of 52 hertz have puzzled experts before. Now, an unidentified sound in the Southern Ocean that was first recorded in the 1960s might finally have an explanationor, at least, a partial one.First heard nearly six decades ago, the oddly mechanical sound has been named bio-duck due to its short, quack-like nature,dubbed one of the largest unsolved mysteries of the Southern Ocean. The sound could still be heard in the following decades. In 1982, the noise was captured once more during a soundscape analysis of the South Fiji Basin.In 1986, Ross Chapman, a researcher at the University of Victoria in Canada, became involved in examining the data from that experiment.We discovered that the data contained a gold mine of new information about many kinds of sound in the ocean, including sounds from marine mammals, he says in a statement released during the 187th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, where he presented the research last week.In 2014, scientists attributed the bio-duck sound to Antarctic minke whales. These creatures are known for producing the most bizarre sounds, as NOAA Fisheries marine biologist Sofie Van Parijs said at the time. A year earlier, researchers had placed acoustic recorder tags on two minke whales to document the noise. They found that it either came from the animal with the tag or another minke whale close by.Balaenoptera bonaerensis "bio duck"Watch on Although the whales were linked to the sound, the mystery continued. Scientists would need to get visual confirmation of the mammals producing the bio-duck noise to verify its source. The sounds have never been conclusively identified, according to the new statement.Instead, Chapmans analysis has brought to light that the sounds might actually be a conversation, not isolated noises.We found multiple speakers in different ocean locations, all making these sounds, Chapman tells the Morning News Zai Apolonio.Chapman helped analyze the data from the 1982 recording and found the sound was repeatable. At first, Chapman and his colleagues couldnt believe it was biological. Back then, the study of ocean noises was in its infancy, he says in the statement, adding that they learned something new about sound in the ocean every day as we looked further into the data.It was really an exciting time for us, Chapman says.During the 1982 experiment, researchers recorded sound using a line array of hydrophones towed behind a ship for three weeks. They collected data nonstop, listening to all the sounds in the ocean and all the time, says Chapman to Cosmos Imma Perfetto. What made the effort special was that it used multiple hydrophones, working together as an acoustic antenna that allowed the researchers to determine where the sound was coming from.The researchers identified at least four individual speakers producing the bio-duck sound in different locations across the ocean, Cosmos reports.But what shocked Chapman was how similar to a conversation the noises seemed.The most amazing thing was that when one speaker was talking, the others were quiet, as though they were listening, he says in the statement. Then the first speaker would stop talking and listen to responses from others.Although this new result, alongside the 2014 study, adds to the body of research around the bio-duck noise, Chapman believes a larger mystery remains.The question is: When do they make the bio-duck sound, and why do they make it? he tells Cosmos. I wouldnt say that the answer is really known, even today.Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.Filed Under: Animals, Antarctica, Australia, Mammals, Mysteries, New Zealand, Oceans, Sound Recordings, Whales
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  • Photos from CGarchitect.com's post
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    Viz Pro of the Week Congratulations to Tran Tien Trung (@true_studio.viz) for winning this week's "Viz Pro of the Week" on CGarchitect.com!Their images for a tent concept set in the African savannah truly capture the ambience of the wild!https://link.cgarchitect.com/vizpro17november2024Don't forget to check out their profile on CGarchitect.com to explore their full portfolio.#VizProOfTheWeek #CGarchitect #ArchViz #Inspiration #DesignInspiration #ArchitecturalVisualization #3Drendering #3D #Architecture #3dvisualization #render #3drender #3dmodeling #vray #coronarender #unreal #sketchup #3dsmax
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  • OpenAI faces critical test as Chinese models close the gap in AI leadership
    venturebeat.com
    Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn MoreIn the fast-moving world of AI, competition is heating upand nowhere is this more evident than in the battle over advanced reasoning models. In just the past few days, three new AI models from Chinese developersDeepseek R1 (HighFlyer Capital Management), Marco-1 (Alibaba), and OpenMMLabs hybrid model have entered the fray, challenging OpenAIs o1 Preview in performance and accessibility.These releases highlight how quickly open-source innovation is catching up to proprietary giants like OpenAI, whose o1-preview model set a new benchmark for complex reasoning tasks when it was released in mid-September. With OpenAI expected to unveil its next release as early as next week, the pressure is mounting to prove its dominance isnt slipping.This race has broader implications beyond model performance. OpenAIs skyrocketing $157 billion valuation and ambitious timeline for artificial general intelligence (AGI) have put intense pressure on its leadership to maintain momentum, especially as competitors close the gap faster than ever. Last year, OpenAIs GPT-4 had a five-month lead before Anthropics Claude 2 debuted. This year, OpenAIs lead with o1-preview has shrunk to just two and a half months, underscoring the rapid pace of innovation across the industry.Meanwhile, Anthropic has upped the stakes by releasing its Model Context Protocol (MCP), which simplifies AI-data integration and paves the way for next-gen applications. This open-source initiative also signals how other players in the field, including open-source-focused labs like AI2 with its OLMo 2 model, and Nous Researchs Nous Forge are broadening access to advanced AI capabilities with rival approaches to OpenAI.For a detailed breakdown of this of these Chinese models, what they offer, how OpenAI and Google are likely to respond in the coming weeks, MCP, and OLMo 2 check out our full discussion in the video below. You wont want to miss the analysis from AI developer Sam Witteveen, who shares exclusive insights with me on why all of these developments matter. To my surprise, he was particularly bullish about MCP and its benefits suggesting this could be significant for helping create our own personal agents.VB DailyStay in the know! Get the latest news in your inbox dailyBy subscribing, you agree to VentureBeat's Terms of Service.Thanks for subscribing. Check out more VB newsletters here.An error occured.
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