• Krampus is cooking up holiday mischief in Something's Awry Productions' short film, "Crunch Time," created with #MaxonOne
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    Krampus is cooking up holiday mischief in Something's Awry Productions' short film, "Crunch Time," created with #MaxonOne. See more maxonvfx.com/3BeIfsu
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  • Have You Ever Seen a Yo-Yo Dance Like This? | Shu Takada @TED
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    Have You Ever Seen a Yo-Yo Dance Like This? | Shu Takada @TED
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  • How AI Is Saving Billions of Years of Human Research Time | Max Jaderberg | TED
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    How AI Is Saving Billions of Years of Human Research Time | Max Jaderberg | TED
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  • Tenebris Somnia: The Retro Survival Horror with Live Action Cutscenes
    forums.unrealengine.com
    Hello dev community! Tobas Rusjan here from Saibot Studios. I want to share with you the game were creating with my partner Andrs Borghi since 2022. We received an Epic MegaGrant back in 2023 and thanks to that we h
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  • <p>Survios brings authenticity and immersion to VR title Alien: Rogue Incursion with UE5</p>
    www.unrealengine.com
    Hear Survios CTO and Co-Founder Alexander Silkin speak about the role specific UE5 features such as Chaos and Niagara played in developing the highly-anticipated virtual reality experience Alien: Rogue Incursion.
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  • The Best Books of 2024
    www.smithsonianmag.com
    Whether you're doing some holiday shopping or looking for your own next read, consider our thoughtfully curated lists.
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  • Researchers Thought They Found Amelia Earhart's Missing Plane. It Turned Out to Be a Plane-Shaped Pile of Rocks
    www.smithsonianmag.com
    Researchers Thought They Found Amelia Earharts Missing Plane. It Turned Out to Be a Plane-Shaped Pile of RocksMonths after capturing a promising sonar image, they learned that the blurry object was nothing more than a rock formation that resembled the aviators Lockheed 10-E Electra aircraft A sonar image taken on November 1 shows a rock formation. Deep Sea Vision via InstagramEarlier this year, researchers announced that they had captured an intriguing sonar image: a grainy object shaped roughly like a plane resting 16,400 feet below the surface of the Pacific Ocean. The site was located about 100 miles from Howland Island, which was Amelia Earharts intended destination when her plane vanished in the summer of 1937.Her disappearance is one of the most enduring mysteries in aviation history, and the researchers hoped they had solved it. But they knew they would need more information before drawing definitive conclusions.On November 6, the exploration company Deep Sea Vision announced in an Instagram post that it had bad news: The mysterious object was a rock formation that just so happened to be shaped like Earharts Lockheed 10-E Electra aircraft.Talk about the cruelest formation ever created by nature, Deep Sea Vision CEO Tony Romeo, a former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer, tells CNNs Taylor Nicioli. Its almost like somebody did set those rocks out in this nice little pattern of her plane, just to mess with somebody out there looking for her.Romeo and two of his brothers are also pilots, and they were hopeful about their chances, as he told the Wall Street Journals Nidhi Subbaraman in January. After all, they had always suspected that the mystery would be solved by pilots, rather than mariners. Several years ago, Romeo sold his real estate interests to fund the $11 million search.Based on the facts of Earharts final voyage, the company was searching in the right place, as Dorothy Cochrane, an aeronautics curator at the Smithsonians National Air and Space Museum, tells Smithsonian magazine. Today, most experts think that Earhart ran out of fuel near Howland Island.That was the conclusion that Elgen Long, an American aviator and researcher, and his wife, Marie, came to after decades of exhaustive research, which they published in their 1999 book Amelia Earhart: The Mystery Solved. In recent years, exploration companies like Deep Sea Vision and Nauticoswhich has staged three unsuccessful searcheshave been building on their work.With each expedition, they compress the search area, says Cochrane. I remain hopeful that the Electra will be found. Amelia Earhart posing for a portrait circa 1936, a year before she disappeared. Library of Congress / Getty ImagesAt the time of her disappearance, Earhart was a household name around the world. She had risen to fame after becoming the first woman to fly across the Atlantic as a passenger in 1928. Four years later, she became the first woman (and second person) to make the same voyage as a solo pilot.In June 1937, Earhart hoped to break a new barrier: becoming the first woman to fly around the world. After setting out from Florida, Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, traveled for more than 20,000 miles, making stops in South America, Africa, India and New Guinea. The next leg of the journey was crossing the Pacific.The duo planned to stop on Howland Island, a 13,200-foot-long strip of land in the middle of the ocean, where they would refuel. After taking off on July 2, the plane and its two passengers were never seen again.The official search lasted for more than two weeks but proved fruitless. In the eight decades since, interested onlookers have felt compelled to keep looking. As Romeo told the Wall Street Journal, working on the mystery was maybe the most exciting thing Ill ever do in my life.Late last year, Romeo set out with his 16-person crew from Deep Sea Vision. The team used millions of dollars of advanced equipmentsonar technology attached to an autonomous underwater vehicleto scan 5,200 square miles of the ocean floor.A few months later, the researchers were reviewing sonar images when they noticed the plane-shaped object. Their discovery made headlines around the world. While many experts were intrigued by the news, they also urged caution.It really requires further research, Cochrane told Smithsonian magazines Sarah Kuta at the time. Finding something thats really worth investigating further is step one. Verifying its the actual craft is step two.The fuzzy sonar images had been taken from about 1,640 feet away. A few weeks ago, the team returned to the site and positioned their underwater vehicle directly above the area. After a 24-hour-long wait, the results were in: A high-resolution image showed nothing more than an unfortunate rock formation, as Romeo tells the Wall Street Journal.Im super disappointed out here, but you know, I guess thats life, he adds.Romeo isnt giving up; in the recent Instagram post, Deep Sea Vision promised that its continuing to search. So is Nauticos, which recently completed an analysis of potential search areas using radio data, per CNN. David Jourdan, the companys co-founder and president, thinks the remaining areas could potentially be investigated in one more mission.Meanwhile, without new evidence, some onlookers have formed their own versions of the story. For many years, conspiracy theories about Earharts disappearancethat she was a spy, that she adopted a new identityproliferated. Cochrane hopes that the plane will be found, finally putting some of these notions to rest.Besides solving one of the greatest mysteries of the 20th century, she says, the discovery would end speculation and return focus to Amelia Earharts enduring contributions to aviation and her impact in womens and American history.Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.
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  • NASA Pushes Back America's Return to the Moon to 2027, With the Next Artemis Program Flight Slated for 2026
    www.smithsonianmag.com
    The Orion spacecraft during the fifth day of the Artemis 1 mission on Nov 20, 2022 NASA Johnson Space Center via Wikimedia CommonsThe next time Americans will see astronauts on the moon will now be no sooner than 2027, after NASA announced further delays to its Artemis program on Thursday.Artemis 2, a ten-day flight around the moon and back with a crew of four astronauts, is now planned for April 2026, instead of its former target of September 2025.Artemis 3, intended to be the first crewed mission to land on the moon in more than 50 years, is now planned for mid-2027.The Artemis program is NASAs campaign to establish human presence on the moon once again, with lunar bases that will serve as a staging point for eventual missions to Mars. The program has faced several delays in the past and is estimated to cost $93 billion by the end of the 2025 fiscal year, wrote Alexandra Witze for NatureNews in 2022.The updates to our mission plans are a positive step toward ensuring we can safely accomplish our objectives at the moon and develop the technologies and capabilities needed for crewed Mars missions, Catherine Koerner, NASAs associate administrator for exploration systems development, says in a statement.Inside the Epic Artemis Moon MissionsWatch on The delays were announced after an investigation into the performance of the Orion crew capsules heat shield as the spacecraft re-entered Earths atmosphere during the 2022 Artemis 1 unmanned test mission.After the Orion space capsule returned to Earth, engineers noticed flaws in the spacecrafts heat shield, the structure that protects its astronaut crew from the temperatures of atmospheric re-entry, which can reach up to 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit.The investigation found that during the 2022 re-entry test, hot gases trapped inside the heat shields outer layer were not able to vent and dissipate as expected, per another NASA statement. Instead, the gases built up pressure and cracked the Avcoat material that composes the heat shields outer layer and is designed to wear away as it heats.However, the team made another crucial findingin localized areas of the heat shield, where the Avcoat was more permeable, the gases vented successfully and kept those regions from cracking.We took our heat shield investigation process extremely seriously with crew safety as the driving force behind the investigation, Howard Hu, manager of the Orion program at NASAs Johnson Space Center, says in thestatement. The process was extensive. We gave the team the time needed to investigate every possible cause, and they worked tirelessly to ensure we understood the phenomenon and the necessary steps to mitigate this issue for future missions.NASA notes that had there been a crew aboard the Artemis 1 flight, the data show they would have remained safe, despite the damage to the heat shield. Still, engineers will limit the time Orion spends in high temperatures by changing the trajectory of Artemis 2s re-entry.During Artemis 1, Orion entered Earths atmosphere using a technique called skip guidance entry. Like a rock skipping across a pond, the spacecraft dips in and out of Earths atmosphere, slowing itself with drag and then rising with lift, until finally descending with parachutes for the splashdown. Engineers suggest this technique allowed enough heat to buildin the heat shield and cause damage.Based on the findings of the investigation, NASA will shorten the duration of this skip phase for Artemis 2, reports Jeff Foust for Space News. NASAs Space Launch System rocket launches carrying the Orion spacecraft on November 16, 2022, for the Artemis 1 flight test. NASA / Bill IngallsThe updated timeline will also allow NASA to troubleshoot technical issues, and the investigation was run in parallel to other assembly steps and testing to keep the timeline as close to the original as possible.In a new space race to land on the moons water-rich south pole, which could be used as a future source of fuel, the Artemis program is part of the United States plan to reach the moon before China, which announced a program to reach the moon by 2030 and establish a southern lunar research base by 2040.The Artemis campaign is the most daring, technically challenging, collaborative, international endeavor humanity has ever set out to do, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson says in the statement.We have made significant progress on the Artemis campaign over the past four years, and Im proud of the work our teams have done to prepare us for this next step forward in exploration as we look to learn more about Orions life support systems to sustain crew operations during Artemis 2. We need to get this next test flight right. Thats how the Artemis campaign succeeds.Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.Filed Under: Artemis, Astronauts, Moon, NASA, Outer Space, Politics, Space Travel
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  • Welcome to this week's episode of CGaNews, where we bring you the latest and greatest from the world of architectural visualizat...
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    Welcome to this week's episode of CGaNews, where we bring you the latest and greatest from the world of architectural visualization! https://youtu.be/q10DzirKFfochaosHere's what you can expect in this episode:- "Viz Pro of the Week" - Add Hundreds of Hanging Plants in 3ds Max- Chaos Envision Beta Launch- Procedural Vines in 3ds Max- Achieving Realism: Wooden Floors- Best of the WeekDon't forget to connect with us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and join our growing community on Discord to stay up to date with all things archviz. We can't wait to see you there!LinkedIn: CGArchitectInstagram: @cgarchitect_proDiscord: Join our communityDont forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more updates!Enjoyed this episode? Make sure to like, subscribe, and share to help us continue bringing you the latest archviz news.#CGarchitect #CGaNews #ArchViz #3DVisualization #Vray7 #CoronaRenderer #BestOfTheWeek #ArchVizCommunity #ArchitecturalRendering #Enscape #AI #realtime #Vantage #ForestPack #Envision #Chaos
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  • Sakana AIs CycleQD outperforms traditional fine-tuning methods for multi-skill language models
    venturebeat.com
    CycleQD merges skills of experts models in clever ways to create many new models with multiple skills, no fine-tuning required.Read More
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