• Cinematic Concept Art - Athena Productions
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    https://www.artstation.com/athenaproductions8 Plasticity Modeling Guide: https://www.udemy.com/course/plasticity-modeling-guide-by-arrimus-3d/?referralCode=85C41A46EAE3EF8725DF Arrimus Ultimate 3D Course: https://www.udemy.com/course/arrimus3d/?referralCode=446E0E08AE1808A2938A Practical Sci-Fi Design: https://arrimus3d.gumroad.com/l/scifidesign ORhttps://www.udemy.com/course/practical-sci-fi-design/?referralCode=90114E112DAE1B47430A Ultimate Sci-Fi Soldier: https://www.udemy.com/course/ultimate-sci-fi-soldier/?referralCode=440AD5E0F74E48EAEFB2 Gumroad https://gumroad.com/arrimus3d Patreon http://www.patreon.com/Arrimus3D. Artstation https://www.artstation.com/arrimus3d Business 3dtut@protonmail.comGiving me a thumbs up and subscribing and clicking the bell shows you find my videos helpful. If you want to support me check out my Patreon visible in the last 20 seconds of the video. Thanks.Ending Music: Bensound
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  • The easiest way to make flowing shapes in Blender - The Curves To Mesh Add-on
    www.youtube.com
    This add-on is going to be a godsend for making banners, flags, loincloths and other flowing objects where you want a load of control over the shape and don't want to use the sculpt tools (though I would probably use this first and then the sculpt tools after to finalise the smaller details).Curves to mesh: https://blendermarket.com/products/curves-to-mesh/?ref=834 Support the channel on Patreon and get videos a week early: https://www.patreon.com/ArtisansofVaul Free Add OnsRePrimitive: https://github.com/eXzacT/RePrimitive Old Modifier Panel: https://bluenile3d.gumroad.com/l/sexoc Quick Snap: https://github.com/JulienHeijmans/quicksnap CharMorph: https://github.com/Upliner/CharMorph Simple Tabs: https://chippwalters.gumroad.com/l/simpletabs Edge Flow: https://github.com/BenjaminSauder/EdgeFlow Sculpt Bridge: https://blendermarket.com/products/sculpt-bridge-tool (Affiliate links) SUPPORT THE CHANNEL BY BUYING SOME STUFF YOU WERE GOING TO GET ANYWAY ;pMachin3 Tools: https://blendermarket.com/products/machin3tools/?ref=834 nSolve: https://blendermarket.com/products/nsolve?search_id=31807585/?ref=834 Hard Ops and Boxcutter discount bundle: https://blendermarket.com/products/hard-ops--boxcutter-ultimate-bundle/?ref=834 Hard Ops: https://blendermarket.com/products/hardopsofficial/?ref=834 Boxcutter: https://blendermarket.com/products/boxcutter/?ref=834 Mesh Machine: https://blendermarket.com/products/meshmachine/?ref=834 Just Panels: https://blendermarket.com/products/just-panels/?ref=834 Construction Lines: https://blendermarket.com/products/construction-lines/?ref=834 Cablerator: https://blendermarket.com/products/cbl/?ref=834 Mesh Copier:https://blendermarket.com/products/mesh-copier/?ref=834 Grid Modeler: https://blendermarket.com/products/grid-modeler/?ref=834 Curve Machine: https://blendermarket.com/products/curvemachine/?ref=834 Decal Machine: https://blendermarket.com/products/decalmachine/?ref=834 Punch It: https://blendermarket.com/products/punchit/?ref=834 One Click Damage (OCD)/Cracker discount bundle: https://blendermarket.com/products/ocd--cracker-damage-bundle/?ref=834 One Click Damage (OCD): https://blendermarket.com/products/ocd/?ref=834 Cracker: https://blendermarket.com/products/cracker/?ref=834 Flowify: https://blendermarket.com/products/flowify/?ref=834 Simple Bend: https://blendermarket.com/products/simple-bend/?ref=834 Conform Object: https://blendermarket.com/products/conform-object/?ref=834 Curves to mesh: https://blendermarket.com/products/curves-to-mesh/?ref=834 Mesh Materializer: https://blendermarket.com/products/mesh-materializer/?ref=834 Favourite modifiers: https://blendermarket.com/products/favourite-modifiers/?ref=834 Wrap Master: https://blendermarket.com/products/wrap-master/?ref=834 00:00 Intro00:52 Surface to Mesh09:52 Profile to Mesh12:28 Sweep to Mesh
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  • We Recently Got Hacked!
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    Join the askNK Mini Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@askNKMini?sub_confirmation=1 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/asknk Discord: https://discord.gg/G2kmTjUFGm Twitter: https://bit.ly/3a0tADG Join Weekly Newsletter: https://bit.ly/3lpfvSm https://youtu.be/6IssOTBUfRg?si=nF-ysyZKLNwVYqGH ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Blender Premium Tutorials Blender Tutorials #1: https://bit.ly/3nbfTEu Blender Tutorials #2: https://tinyurl.com/yeyrkreh Learn HardSurface In Blender: https://bit.ly/3E5nP2T 3D Cars Building, Rigging & Animation: https://bit.ly/4h5HXEq Cinematic Car Animation Course: https://bit.ly/3ORFccG Alive! - Animation Course: https://bit.ly/3AEFvyA Human - Realistic Portrait Creation: https://bit.ly/2XvMT1j ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------#asknk #free3D #free3Dmodels #free3Dresources #freetextures #freematerials #freefriday #premium #b3d #blender3d #free #addons #blenderaddons #new #3dnews #release #update Thumbnail Art:**Artworks used on thumbnails are to support artists who used the principal or third-party tools discussed within the video.** #SupportsArtist
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  • Animated Sci-Fi Panels in Blender #b3d
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    Geonode random panels in Blender using the Random Flow add-on.Shops:blendermarket.com/creators/blenderguppygumroad.com/blenderguppyPatreon:patreon.com/blenderguppy#b3d #conceptart #blender3d #blenderaddon #blendermarket
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  • Selection Masks - Boris FX Optics Quick Tips
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    Dive into selection masks in Boris FX Optics. Learn how to isolate filters to specific parts of your image with precision. Utilize properties like luminance, saturation, and hue masks to target highlights, shadows, and specific colors effortlessly. Discover advanced techniques for adjusting range, position, and radius to create seamless edits and achieve professional results. Whether you're enhancing a vibrant sky or refining subtle details, these tips will elevate your photo editing workflow.// K E Y P O I N T S //* Dynamic Masking: Isolate filters based on luminance, saturation, or hue for targeted adjustments.* Precision On-Screen Controls: Adjust mask Position, Range, and Radius directly on the image.* Customizable Masks: Fine-tune with Black/White Clip, Shrink/Grow, and Blur settings.For more Optics tips and training, visit borisfx.com or join the Discord channel.// U S E F U L L I N K S //Find out what Optics has to offer: https://borisfx.com/products/optics/ Learn all Optics with free videos : https://borisfx.com/videos/?tags=product:Optics&amp ;amp;search= // D I S C O R D C H A N N E L //https://www.borisfxdiscord.com/ #optics #photography #borisfx
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  • In the driest place on Earth, water hides in plain sight
    www.popsci.com
    View of fog at the Atacama desert.Image: MARTIN BERNETTI/AFP via Getty Images ShareThe Atacama Desert in northern Chile sits in the rain shadow of the Andes Mountains. Though it borders the Pacific Ocean, a persistent cold flow known as the Humboldt Current keeps moisture levels in the air relatively low. Clouds form, but quickly dissipate. As a result, rain comes rarely and in small amounts a few millimeters per year, on average in some parts. In other parts, decades-old weather stations have never recorded any precipitation. Outside of a handful of valleys in Antarctica, the Atacama is the driest place on Earth. The inhospitable landscape of sand, bare rock, and salt flats is so extreme and otherworldly that its used as a proxy for Mars by researchers.Yet still, people live theremostly in a smattering of coastal cities and towns. Iquique, the oceanside regional capital, is home to more than 230,000 people. Just inland and upslope from Iquique is the fast-growing municipality of Alto Hospicio, which has ballooned to more than 140,000 people (up from fewer than 100,000 in 2012) amid a lithium mining boom.Fresh water comes from an underground aquifer, which hasnt been meaningfully refreshed by rainfall for nearly 10,000 years. As more people rely on the aquifer, its drying up. Eventually, there will be nothing left. Desalination plants, which remove salt from ocean water, can fill some of the need, but they are expensive and energy intensive to run, especially for low-income cities like Alto Hospicio. Most desalination plants in the region service mining operations, not people.An alternative, as-of-yet untapped, and inexpensive water source could help resolve the burgeoning water crisis. And its water thats been hiding in plain view. Fog harvesting is a sustainable, simple method for collecting moisture from low-lying clouds. Its long been used in rural areas around the world to support isolated villages of a few hundred people. But a new study suggests it could work on a much grander scale.An analysis published February 20 in the journal Frontiers in Environmental Science suggests fog harvesting could meet the needs of Alto Hospicios informal settlements, providing as much as 300,000 liters per week to 10,300 people, who mostly live disconnected from the formal water distribution system. Currently, they rely on the disappearing aquifer, but that water is delivered to them via trucks instead of pipes, upping the cost and reducing reliability and accessibility. For inhabitants of these settlements, the water supply is even shakier than for the rest of the citys residents, and thus fog offers an even bigger opportunity. Beyond drinking water, fog harvesting could also be used to irrigate green spaces in the region, or to fuel hydroponic agricultureoffering people a cheap source of locally grown, fresh food.Fog collectors in Alto Patache, Chile, an hours drive south of Alto Hospicio and Iquique. These collectors and meteorological station near were used to help build the fog study model. Image: Virginia Carter On its own, this water is not going to save the city, says Virginia Carter, lead study author, a geographer, and an assistant professor at the Universidad Mayor in Chile. But fog is a resource that might make a real difference, she says. It could contribute, and in many places it might be important, Carter explains, especially as Alto Hospicio continues to grow and climate change makes the existing water supply even more tenuous.Fog harvesting relies on a low-tech set-up. Usually, a fine plastic mesh, like the type that might be used to shade heat-sensitive garden beds, is strung across two support poles a few feet in the air. A gutter beneath the mesh channels the moisture that condenses on the panel into a storage container, so it can be readily collected. The more panels and greater surface area of mesh used, the more water is harvested.Unlike the aquifer beneath the Atacama, fog water is a potentially renewable resource. Low clouds routinely get churned up from the Pacific and blow overland. Without the mesh, the moisture evaporates in the dry air as the temperature rises each day, but with it, the fog would be only temporarily waylaid providing valuable fresh water to people, before its treated and cycled back into the ocean.To demonstrate that fog harvesting would be worthwhile for Alto Hospicio and northern Chile more broadly, Carter and her co-authors combined a year of observational measurements with satellite imagery and mathematical modeling of the regions fog cycles. The researchers set up two one-square-meter standard fog collectors at different altitudes, along with a weather station to keep tabs on air moisture, temperature, wind speed, and other variables. They also used remote sensing to map fine-grained altitude and fog density across the province. Finally, they synthesized this and other data from existing fog collector projects into a mathematical model intended to estimate how much fog could be harvested at different times.They found that the fog is highly seasonal, appearing from May through October (the Southern Hemispheres winter into spring). It peaks in June during the night and early morning, and all but disappears in the warmer months and by midday. In the zones immediately around Alto Hospicio, fog collectors would yield an estimated average of 2.5 liters of water per square meter of mesh during the fog season, according to the study.Fog collecting panels in Falda Verde, Chile where fog harvesting enables the cultivation of lettuce, strawberry, basil, and mint in the desert. Image: Virginia Carter At this rate, it would take 17,000 square meters of collectors (just over three football fields worth) to yield 300,000 liters a weekthe same volume of water currently delivered via truck to Alto Hospicios informal settlements each week. However, Carter notes this is a conservative estimate, as certain areas to the north of the city have much more fog potential than the average, producing more than 5 liters per meter of mesh per day. If fog collectors were placed strategically, then just 200-300 fog collectors (each encompassing about 20 square meters) could reliably provide hundreds of thousands of liters for at least half the year, she explains. Complementary storage tanks or ponds could stretch the fog water into a year-round resource. This is kind of a dream. To develop something like that for Alto Hospicio, Carter says.If providing drinking water to 10,000+ people proves too big of an initial goal, smaller pilot projects might offer a proof of concept. Carter and her colleagues suggest fog harvesting could also be used to irrigate public parks or provide water to hydroponic farms, with less initial investment. Just 110 square meters of mesh would be needed to fulfill the citys green space needs. One square meter of fog collection could yield more than 15 kg of leafy greens each year.Before the dream becomes a reality though, further work is needed. The scientists would like to verify their model estimates with more on-the-ground measurements, to home in on the best locations for fog collectors. Carter says she also hopes to test the quality of the harvested water, and determine what type of treatment would be needed to make it safe for human consumption. Fog can carry exhaust particles, bacteria, and microplasticslike any other natural water source. Yet, even untreated, the water could still have applications in agriculture or mining.And already the research is advancing. Carter and her colleagues plan to release a publicly accessible, detailed map of fog for all of northern Chile later this year, based on their model. She hopes that local and national government officials take notice. This study is a very clear example of how scientific knowledge [can] contribute to public decision-making and policies, she says. We have a problem: We have no water, and its getting worse. But on the other hand, theres a solution. Theres this water sitting and waiting. We just need a logical way to harvest it.
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  • Fog collection could alleviate water stress in desert cities
    www.sciencenews.org
    Rural communities in arid regions have harvested tiny droplets of fog for years as a source of fresh drinking water. Now, researchers say that fog water can be a practical supplement to stave off water stress for larger desert cities.A yearlong assessment of the potential volume of harvested fog water near a city in northern Chiles Atacama Desert found that its possible to collect as much as 5 liters per square meter each day, scientists report Feb. 20 in Frontiers in Environmental Science.Megadrought and poor water management in parts of Chile have placed over 8 million people in the country under water stress. The country faces the threat of recurring shortages by 2050, say Virginia Carter Gamberini, a geographer at Universidad Mayor in Santiago, Chile, and colleagues.The hundreds of thousands of people living in fast-growing, densely populated cities in the Atacama Desert are especially at risk. Much of the groundwater in the region is siphoned off for mining and agriculture. Gamberini and her colleagues focused their analysis on Alto Hospicio, a rapidly expanding settlement of over 100,000 people on the outskirts of the provincial capital Iquique.Nearly all drinking water in Alto Hospicio is trucked in from aquifer drill sites 70 or so kilometers away, at the foot of the Andes mountains. In winter and spring, the region also receives moisturizing wafts of coastal fog, called camanchaca, or darkness, in the local language of Aymara. Low clouds form as humid air masses moving southward from the Amazon meet cool air over the Pacific Ocean. The fog nourishes hardy desert life, including cacti and lichens and algae encrusting the rocky soil.Fog collection is simple, though its usually implemented on a much smaller scale: A 1-meter-square mesh sheet is suspended vertically, facing the fog-loaded wind. Water collects on the mesh and drips into a gutter. The researchers found that between 0.2 and 5 liters of fog water could be harvested per square meter per day in locations around the city during the foggy months, with greater potential in higher-elevation areas.That volume of water is nowhere near enough on its own. Alto Hospicios total consumption requirements are about 300,000 liters weekly, an amount that would require 17,000 square meters of similar mesh to collect. That need is projected to increase as the city grows. But with water pressure rising, the team says, fog harvesting may offer a small bloom of hope in the desert.
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  • Mechanism for local attenuation of DNA replication at double-strand breaks
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 19 February 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-024-08557-9DNA double-strand breaks induce local genome maintenance and inhibition of replication initiation at nearby topologically associating domains without affecting global DNA synthesis.
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