chapter 12 of @buggachat’s open my eyes has (to no one’s surprise) been wrecking me👍 read it!!
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@griffenboy
chapter 12 of @buggachat’s open my eyes has (to no one’s surprise) been wrecking me👍 read it!!
lmao get drinked sky
a concept: a bus, but horizontal
i have to do all the work around here
I don’t know why but I was picturing this:
He had to fight his way to the top
follow forthefuns for more funny stuff
Your honor! Please direct your attention towards the manga.
As you can see there are small pieces of paper sticking out of every volume.
But no such paper is sticking out of the Batman comic.
The reason? The Batman book doesn’t belong to the library. The photographer put it there to take a picture.
Once again making hasty assumptions, Wright?
First of all, I’d like to direct the court’s attention to this particular spot, in the top right-hand corner.
Notice how the words are blocking the top of the Batman book.
With this in mind, how can you claim that there is “no such paper sticking out of the Batman comic”?!
Say whaaaat?
Well uhm
Look at the size of the paper pieces, they’re all sticking pretty far out.
If there was paper in the batman comic, it would be big enough to stick up over the text.
And while gravity does exist, it probably won’t make the paper do a 90 degree turn and just lean horisontally left at the middle.
Still grasping for straws, Wright?
Hypothetically, if there were a paper there, this picture would not be able to prove its presence. I’ve taken the liberty of drawing a diagram to illustrate my point. We are faced with three possibilities. It is possible that (1) the paper was simply tucked in deeper than the others.
Paper is a soft material, Wright. It’s not unreasonable for it to do a (2) 90 degree turn.
Or perhaps, (3) a paper does not exist there at all.
Either way, you cannot prove your client innocent without sufficient evidence.
Which, of course, is impossible thanks to the obtrusive words.
I’m sorry Edgeworth.
I concede that I can’t disprove theory 1
But the image you submited for theory 2 is contradictory.
Look at the tilt of the other papers. They clearly prove how much the paper would tilt.
And theory 3 is my point! Why would the library’s book not have this piece of paper when the other library books do?
While you still have thory 1, there is another contradiction.
The books are not in alphabetical order, this proves that the batman comic was placed there specifically for the picture!
Ack.
(Perhaps I should’ve left the artistry to the forensic artist…)
Now hold it right there! It doesn’t matter which direction the paper is going because it’s impossible to prove it even exists!
Those theories are all the same! We do not have enough information to prove them. There could be an infinite amount of papers in there for all we know. I simply presented them only so that the court could better understand your baseless conjecture!
… I suppose the order of the books do seem out of the ordinary. However, therein lies not just one possibility. Clearly, those are Japanese graphic novels, also known as “manga”. And the Batman comic book is a graphic novel, too, no?
Seeing as it currently has only graphic novels in the shelf, it is possible that any other novels have simply not yet been restocked. Asserting whether or not this effect was deliberate is useless– there is no way of knowing if the photographer and the captioner are the same person, let alone their involvement in this picture.
Face it Wright, you can’t prove any of these groundless accusations!
Did everyone just ignore the library sticker?
D E AD
I will reblog this any time i see it on my dash
Absolutely fucking D E S T R O Y E D
This is the strongest Tumblr post I’ve ever witnessed.
This was recommended and as a super logical person I can see why
I’ve been looking for this for ages!!
Apparently legendary.
@hellsite-hall-of-fame
iconic
Catherine Garland, an astrophysicist, started seeing the problem in 2017. She was teaching an engineering course, and her students were using simulation software to model turbines for jet engines. She’d laid out the assignment clearly, but student after student was calling her over for help. They were all getting the same error message: The program couldn’t find their files.
Garland thought it would be an easy fix. She asked each student where they’d saved their project. Could they be on the desktop? Perhaps in the shared drive? But over and over, she was met with confusion. “What are you talking about?” multiple students inquired. Not only did they not know where their files were saved — they didn’t understand the question.
Gradually, Garland came to the same realization that many of her fellow educators have reached in the past four years: the concept of file folders and directories, essential to previous generations’ understanding of computers, is gibberish to many modern students.
Professors have varied recollections of when they first saw the disconnect. But their estimates (even the most tentative ones) are surprisingly similar. It’s been an issue for four years or so, starting — for many educators — around the fall of 2017.
That’s approximately when Lincoln Colling, a lecturer in the psychology department at the University of Sussex, told a class full of research students to pull a file out of a specific directory and was met with blank stares. It was the same semester that Nicolás Guarín-Zapata, an applied physicist and lecturer at Colombia’s Universidad EAFIT, noticed that students in his classes were having trouble finding their documents. It’s the same year that posts began to pop up on STEM-educator forums asking for help explaining the concept of a file.
…so today I learned I’m old.
this is… insane. have none of these people ever played minecraft?
You can play minecraft on iPad now without ever interacting with directories
The problem with the “born digital” generations is that no one is explicitly teaching them how computers work. Yes, so e things are intuitive if you’ve grown up with them, but they’re mostly surface level things. Computer literacy is something kids need to be taught.
is this another consequence of operating systems designed so that end users are encouraged not to learn anything about how the systems operate?
in the US at least, part of the issue is the way in-school computer education changed over the course of the early 2000s: As personal computers became more ubiquitous in (most) homes, and as more schools were forced to teach for testing thanks to No Child Left Behind legislation, computer classes were cut from the curriculum. So, for example, I and my entire elementary grade was taught how to use and access computer directories and systems in a very specific way that students only four or five years behind us may not have, depending on the school and what skills it prioritized teaching.
As the “digital native” myth took hold - the idea that children where somehow naturally suited for digital life and didn’t need to be actively taught computer skills just because they could click the right things and move a mouse - computer classes continued to fade out of schools. A lot of districts probably assumed that parents would teach their children computer skills at home, except no one actually told parents they should be doing this, or how to do it. Schools have started to bring back computer/media curricula over the past couple of years – i have a friend from my graduate program who is now a middle school tech integrator and explicitly teaches the students how computer directories work, how to save a document off the cloud, how to organize files, etc – but we’re definitely seeing a gulf in skills among current college students/recent grads who were caught in that early-2000s shift.
(danah boyd has written a lot about the myth of the digital native – i don’t have time at this exact moment to look up everything i read for my classes a few years ago, but you can read a chapter about it here from her book It’s Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens (2014))
Teaching my eldest to mod her video games, and where to keep said mods, and how to access that. Because her laptop for school, her phone, all her shit doesn’t run “programs” or “applications”, it runs “apps”, cute and easy and you have a million of them and it kinda does its own thing with friendly big buttons but like… how to actually get things done that aren’t straightforward?
Its not in the big friendly buttons. It’s in the directories, and advanced settings, and that’s not something she needs to think about 90% of the time, she doesn’t have to.
It’s this weird way stuff has been made user friendly to such a degree that you don’t need to know how it works, it just does. It’s literally magic. We’ve reached the point where kids treat technology as magic.
It’s very sci-fi, honestly.
Battle scenes from Critical Role Campaign 3 episode 5
Get off the road! by Anato Finnstark
This artist on Instagram // Tumblr (inactive)
I’m already veeeeery invested
i hate star trek because every time theyre like “oh my god the skringles have broken the crankus treaty with the skronglies which mean the flongles are starving because they cant get binkbonk berries” and every time im like “oh my god they cant get binkbonk berries…”
Trying to draw buildings
yo here’s a useful tip from your fellow art ho cynellis… use google sketchup to create a model of the room/building/town you’re trying to draw… then take a screenshot & use it as a reference! It’s simple & fun!
Sketchup is incredibly helpful. I can’t recommend it enough.
There’s a 3D model warehouse where you can download all kinds of stuff so you don’t have to build everything from scratch.
reblog to save a life
This is an incomplete tutorial, and it drives me crazy every time I see it come around.
We live in a pretty great digital age and we have access to a ton of amazing tools that artists in past generations couldn’t even dream of, but a lot of people look at a cool trick and only learn half of the process of using it.
Here’s the missing part of this tutorial:
How do you populate your backgrounds?
Well, here’s the answer:
If the focus is the environment, you must show a person in relation to that environment.
The examples above are great because they show how to use the software itself, but each one just kind of “plops” the character in front of their finished product with no regard of the person’s relation to their environment.
How do you fix this?
Well, here’s the simplest solution:
This is a popular trick used by professional storyboard and comic artists alike when they’re quickly planning compositions. It’s simple and it requires you to do some planning before you sit down to crank out that polished, final version of your work, but it will be the difference between a background and an environment.
From Blacksad (artist: Juanjo Guarnido)
From Hellboy (Mike Mignola)
Even if your draftsmanship isn’t that great (like mine), people can be more immersed in the story you tell if you just make it feel like there is a world that exists completely separate from the one in which they currently reside – not just making a backdrop the characters stand in front of.
Your creations live in a unique world, and it is as much a character as any other member of the cast. Make it as believable as they are.
Great comments and tutorials!
I’m a 3d artist and have been exploring the possibilities of using 3d as reference for 2d poses. I want to add a couple of tips and things!
Sketchup is very useful for environment references, and I assume it’s reasonably easy to learn. If you’re interested in going above and beyond, I highly recommend learning a proper 3d modeling program to help with art, especially because you can very easily populate a scene or location with characters!
Using 3ds Max I can pretty quickly construct an environment for reference. But going beyond that, I can also pose a pretty simple ‘CAT’ armature (known in 3d as a rig) straight into the scene, which can be totally customized, from various limbs, tails, wings, whatever, to proportions, and also can be modeled onto and expanded upon (for an example, you could 3d sculpt a head reference for your character and then attach it to the CAT rig, so you have a reference for complex face angles!)
The armature can also be posed incredibly easily. I know programs exist for stuff like this - Manga Studio, Design Doll - but posing characters in these programs is always an exercise in frustration and very fiddly imo. A simple 3d rig is impossibly easy to pose.
By creating an environment and dropping my character rig into it, I have an excellent point of reference when it comes to drawing the scene!
Not only that, but I can also view the scene from whatever angle I could ever want or need, including the character and their pose/position relative to the environment.
We can even quickly and easily expand this scene to include more characters!
Proper 3d modeling software is immensely powerful, and if you wanted to, you could model a complex environment that occurs regularly in your comic or illustration work (say, a castle interior, or an outdoor forest environment) and populate the scene with as many perspective-grounded characters as you need!
reblogging to save a life
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Look at this amazing addition! This is fantastic!
Not just poses, you can also do this with lighting. Playing with lights in Blender is pretty fun.
Another cool thing: http://www.makehumancommunity.org lets you generate a human model. Like a character creator in a game, but more flexible, and the result is ready to import into a 3d editor like Blender.
This was a lot shorter last time it appeared here. Reblogging for the updated tips and to save a life!
Different Stories Resonate with Different People
I will always reblog this.
I once spent three hours scouring the internet to find this comic again, I will not let that be repeated.
Find your own resonance :)
Old, but still important
I was just thinking about this comic the other day but had no idea how to find it.
Adrian's Wall Part 1 < Part 2 < Part 3
Chit chat with kit cat
Okay okay okay okay but but. Idk if this is new from this season or if it’s been at H.E.L.M. the whole time but was nobody gonna tell me there was still a rendition of Journey in the game. And a really nice one at that.
I swear that piece, and the mission that it accompanies, is honestly one of my favourite things in D2 and I still miss it since they took it out.
[ Original Link ]
A tribute to Steven Universe(2/2)
Yayyy I’ve finished it!
It’s been a long journey, thanks to the show and its staffs.
Edit : For better resolution, check the original link!