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Topic: Stumble? |
Marty Pollard
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Posted 15 Jul 2005 8:58 am
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Anybody use Stumble?
Pretty cool.
Found this... [This message was edited by Marty Pollard on 15 July 2005 at 10:00 AM.] |
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Howard Tate
From: Leesville, Louisiana, USA, R.I.P.
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Posted 15 Jul 2005 2:29 pm
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Good grief! That could be addictive.
------------------
Howard, 'Les Paul Recording, Zum S12U, Vegas 400, Boss ME-5, Boss DM-3, DD-3, Sierra Session D-10
http://www.Charmedmusic.com
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Bob Martin
From: Madison Tn
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Posted 17 Jul 2005 2:57 am
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That's kind of like throwing a dead body around it's kind of freaky hee hee. No life at all and all limber. |
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Donna Dodd
From: Acworth, Georgia, USA
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Posted 17 Jul 2005 5:40 am
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Well Marty - she lands pretty comfortably, so her creator was surely a WOMAN!
A man would have her falling in to a cooking or cleaning position. |
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Donny Hinson
From: Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
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Posted 17 Jul 2005 10:19 am
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Hmmm. I saw a bikini-clad woman bouncing off some spheres. I discovered I could control her akimbo descent slightly with the mouse.
So, exactly how do I "use" this program?
Or is it just a kind of interactive screensaver? |
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Bobby Lee
From: Cloverdale, California, USA
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Posted 17 Jul 2005 7:29 pm
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Does anyone have any idea of how this was created? |
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Jim Phelps
From: Mexico City, Mexico
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Posted 17 Jul 2005 11:47 pm
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It's a Flash file, isn't it? |
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Donna Dodd
From: Acworth, Georgia, USA
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 12:19 am
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Well, b0b - I'm surprised you have to ask that question. I'll try to explain. You've got your spheres; you've got your woman; Woman has a bathing suit. Woman also has Arthritis (can tell by looking at her hands). You simply drop the poor Arthritic woman on the spheres and watch her hit her little head.
I mean, "DUH?"
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Charlie McDonald
From: out of the blue
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 5:39 am
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Best I could do was get her to balance on a big ball. She just lies there, relaxing.
Seemed less abusive, somehow. Or less 'objectifying', perhaps.
Does she use both her brain hemispheres to do that? Am I using either of mine?
(Donna, you're right; it's the size of the corpus collosum, the cable between the hemispheres, that is larger in the female of the species. I believe it is that way through evolution. Women have been multi-tasking for, oh, a million years. Ok, twenty or thirty thousand....')[This message was edited by Charlie McDonald on 18 July 2005 at 06:40 AM.] |
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Marty Pollard
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 7:53 am
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Whatever you think of that site, I got to it from here.
This is a browser plugin that just takes you to random websites. You can configure your main interests though.
I'm finding all kinds of cool stuff this way. |
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Larry Weaver
From: Asheville, North Carolina, USA
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 8:48 am
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Bobby,
It looks like a stock Poser model that has been brought into a package like Lightwave or 3d Studio Max, and set up with a very simple IK rig (inverse kinematics). I would guess that the final result was a mix of work in Macromedia Flash and Director. The scripting language in Director ("Lingo") has much better support for imput from 3d packages for realtime purposes, and is supposed to be much easier with dynamics simulations. I'd guess that the final output was tweaked in Flash. Just an educated guess though, as I work mostly in 3d and compositing packages.
regards,
-Larry |
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b0b
From: Cloverdale, CA, USA
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 2:37 pm
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Thanks, Larry.
So, where do the rules for the model's limbs come from? And the "weight" of the various body parts (arms, legs, torso, head)? It all seems to be accounted for. Where does the "gravity" come from?
I sense a lot of complex math happening behind the scenes... |
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Larry Weaver
From: Asheville, North Carolina, USA
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 3:16 pm
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You're hitting the nail on the head b0b. Director is a very deep app, and in the right hands, it can be capable of amazing things. There are a number of people that have constructed some insane physics based realtime applications with Director. You could almost consider it along the lines of a realtime game engine....although, of course it takes a mastemind of the Director scripting language to make it all work. There is quite a bit of power in the scripting language within Director. In it's last update, it added a lot more support for dynamic simulations and data import from 3rd party producers.
I have worked with a few guys that have written plugins and extentions that allow the import of some very complex data from 3d packages. It's quite a bit easier in a 3d package to define and utelize things such as gravity, soft and hard surface simulations and the IK or weight that you see in that simulation.
Since I'm the guy that just makes the 3d surfaces, and provides the IK rig setup, I too am always facinated by what can be done in realtime and always amazed by what the coding gurus produce!
regards,
-Larry |
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Marty Pollard
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 3:25 pm
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This only requires 2 dimensions of course.
But there are how many variables?
Not true gravity so a simple vector in free fall; balls of a few diff diameters; head, torso, arm2, leg2.
Seems rather rudimentary considering some things out there. |
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b0b
From: Cloverdale, CA, USA
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Posted 18 Jul 2005 4:19 pm
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Okay, if it's so 'rudimentary', make me one with a falling possum hitting tree branches. |
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Donna Dodd
From: Acworth, Georgia, USA
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Posted 19 Jul 2005 12:52 am
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yeah, what b0b said!!!! Or make a falling b0b hitting possums on tree branches!!! |
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Marty Pollard
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Posted 19 Jul 2005 5:53 am
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I forgot that the legs and arms are segmented at the joints but still...
Is that model wearing earrings? |
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