HyperWall from HyperSurfaces on Vimeo.
Claire Keane
Jules of Nature
sheepfilms

roma★

⁂

oozey mess

ellievsbear
No title available
cherry valley forever
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Cosmic Funnies
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Stranger Things
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
𓃗
occasionally subtle
🪼

Discoholic 🪩

tannertan36

Janaina Medeiros

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@superahmedkhalifablr
HyperWall from HyperSurfaces on Vimeo.
HyperCar from HyperSurfaces on Vimeo.
Technical demonstration of a HyperCar door
Origami-Inspired Artificial Muscles from Wyss Institute on Vimeo.
Artificial muscles could make soft robots safer and stronger. Researchers at the Wyss Institute, Harvard SEAS, and MIT CSAIL have developed a novel design approach for origami-inspired artificial muscles, capable of lifting 1000x its own weight.
The muscles are made of a compressible skeleton and air or fluid medium encased in a flexible skin, and are powered by pressure difference. The muscle motions are programmed based on the structural geometry of the skeleton. Multi-directional motions can also be programmed into the material. Artificial muscles can also grip, lift, and twist objects.
A variety of materials and fabrication methods can be used to create low-cost artificial muscles. These artificial muscles are fast, light-weight, and powerful, and could be used for miniature medical devices, deployable structures, or wearable robotics.
For more information, please visit: wyss.harvard.edu/artificial-muscles-give-soft-robots-superpowers/
Fisker EMotion - Electrifying Emotions from Henrik Fisker on Vimeo.
Pursuit (4K) from Mike Olbinski on Vimeo.
----- Blu-Ray discs available here: mikeolbinski.com/shop/ Music by Peter Nanasi, find his work here: peternanasi.bandcamp.com/ Follow me: twitter.com/mikeolbinski / facebook.com/mikeolbinskiphotography / instagram.com/mikeolbinski -------
On June 12th, I broke down into tears. Minutes earlier, I had been outside my truck, leaning against it, head buried in my arms, frustration and failure washing over me. I wanted to quit. I got back in the car and as I drove, the pain got the better of me and the tears came.
This past spring was a tough one. Supercell structure and beautiful tornadoes had been very hard to come by. In fact, the tornado in the opening of this film was the only good one I saw this entire year. I had been on the road longer than ever before. Driven more miles. I was away from my family for 12 straight days at one point, and when I got home, I had to tell them I was going back out 24 hours later for June 12th. It was just too good to pass up. It promised to be a day that I could get everything I had been hoping for this spring and I had no choice. My wife understood, even though I knew she wished I stayed home. And I wished it too.
I knew right where I wanted to be that day. But this year I struggled with confidence in trusting my instincts. Maybe it was because the lack of good storms this spring made me question my skills, or maybe it was something else inside of me. Whatever the case, I let myself get twisted and unsure, and found myself 80 miles away from where I had wanted to be when the tornadoes started to drop and the best structure of the year materialized in the sky. The photos from Twitter and Facebook started to roll in and I knew I had missed everything.
It may not be easy to understand why, but when you work as hard as I did this spring, a moment like that can break you. I felt like I let my wife down. But mostly I let myself down. I forgot who I was and that's not me. Or it shouldn't have been me. I failed myself. And it seemed like the easy choice to just give up and head for home.
But I didn't. I'm not sure why, but the pain slowly began to subside. I realized it was only 4pm and the storms were still ongoing. Maybe if I could get in front of them the day could be saved. Ninety minutes later, I got out ahead and saw some of the best structure I'd seen all spring and a lightning show that was so incredible it's one of the very last clips of this film.
And that's why this film is called "Pursuit." Because you can't give up. Keep chasing, keep pursuing. Whatever it is. That's the only way to get what you want.
I learned something about myself on June 12th which carried over to the final few days of chasing this spring. I trusted myself again and those days were incredibly rewarding. This was who I'd been all along but had forgotten. I can't wait for next year.
The work on this film began on March 28th and ended June 29th. There were 27 total days of actual chasing and many more for traveling. I drove across 10 states and put over 28,000 new miles on the ol' 4Runner. I snapped over 90,000 time-lapse frames. I saw the most incredible mammatus displays, the best nighttime lightning and structure I've ever seen, a tornado birth caught on time-lapse and a display of undulatus asperatus that blew my mind. Wall clouds, massive cores, supercell structures, shelf clouds...it ended up being an amazing season and I'm so incredibly proud of the footage in this film. It wasn't the best year in storm chasing history...but I got to chase storms and share it with you guys. All worth it.
I wanted to do something new this year, so I worked with composer Peter Nanasi to develop a custom track for Pursuit. I'm super excited about it and loved the process of exchanging ideas and building the song as the editing of the film progressed. I am so thankful to Peter for what he came up with, I'm in love with this track!
The time away from my family turned out to be over a month all told. I'm always and continually blessed by a wife who supports what I do and backs me completely. But not only do I have her to thank this spring, but also her parents who hung around for a good chunk of May and early June, to help out wherever needed, watch the kids, run errands and generally be there for Jina. I don't have enough words to convey how appreciative I am for them being around while I was gone.
I think that's about it. I could write a lot more, but I'd rather you watch the film and hopefully have a taste of what I saw this spring. There is nothing quite like strong inflow winds, the smell of rain and the crack of thunder. I miss being out there already.
I hope you enjoy and I'll do my best to answer any questions in the comments below!
Technical Details:
I used two Canon 5DSR's along with a Canon 11-24mm, 35mm, 50mm, 135mm and Sigma Art 50mm. Manfrotto tripods. The final product was edited in Lightroom with LR Timelapse, After Effects and Premiere Pro.
Pursuit (4K) from Mike Olbinski on Vimeo.
From a leopard slipping through a Mumbai alleyway to giant cuttlefish courting under the sea, the striking images featured in the current Wildlife Photographer of the Year exhibition are at once beautiful, technically astounding and, often, incredibly moving.Before the widening rupture between humans and nature, creating images of animals was of the utmost importance: animals were among the first subject matter for painting. In his essay Why Look at Animals, the late and renowned art critic John Berger argues that animals “first entered the imagination as messengers and promises”.Wildlife photography joins in this ancient representative tradition, giving new life to animals as symbols and storytellers for the natural world. Nowhere is this better exemplified than in the annual competition run by the Natural History Museum of London. From modest beginnings in 1965, with fewer than 400 entries, it has developed into one of the largest and most prestigious photographic competitions in the world.This year, the competition received over 42,000 entries from almost 100 countries. From these, an international jury selected 100 images across 18 categories, constituting the touring exhibition. It’s currently being hosted, for the third time, at Geelong’s splendid National Wool Museum. This is the only Victorian venue to host the exhibition, under the direction of Padraic Fisher and senior curator Georgia Melville. In Geelong, the images are complemented by The Dead Zoo, a subtle addition to the exhibition space of taxidermy displays drawn from the Wool Museum’s own collection. There’s also an ambient soundscape produced by Joel Carnegie, and the parallel Geelong by Nature exhibition, a local wildlife photography competition.Both competitions underscore what a demanding pursuit wildlife photography can be, requiring an enormous commitment to capturing the perfect shot. Think long hours spent in freezing conditions, with a constant regime of pushups just to keep warm – a scenario endured by Andrew Parkinson while photographing mountain hares on a Scottish icefield! This enthusiastic persistence is increasingly enabled by the proliferation of non-specialist equipment, such as smartphones and the GoPro camera, as used by Tim Laman – the overall winner of Photographer of the Year for his six-photo series Entwined Lives. Taking in a sweeping treetop view of the Indonesian rainforest, the vertigo-inducing portrait of an orangutan is spectacular.Like many of the entries, the photograph’s grandeur is a culmination of artistry, originality and technical excellence. The visually sumptuous images are coupled with engaging tales of the exotic locations, and the supreme effort and persistence involved in their creation – along with a healthy dose of serendipity and great timing. With a direct gaze that seems to reflect our own, Laman’s subject also conveys a sense of intimacy and solitary pathos; significant, perhaps, if one considers the endangered status of the Bornean orangutan.With the growing accessibility of portable or remotely activated gear like the GoPro, there’s a sense of ongoing growth and democratisation of photography competitions. Through this, we are given scope for deeper immersion and understanding of a natural world subject to, and often imperilled by, the inexorable footprint of humanity. A case in point is the winner of one of the photojournalism categories, Australian Paul Hilton’s image of a mass of illegally hunted pangolins, seized before their intended export while frozen from Sumatra and laid out to thaw. Reminiscent of spiral seashells in an abstract, almost monochrome composition, the details of their tightly curled bodies emerge only on closer inspection.It’s a striking image, but one with a tragic back-story. Few people, before seeing this exhibition, are likely to have even known what a pangolin is, and certainly not that these small, critically endangered mammals are the most-trafficked animals in the world. The combination of artistry and a strong environmental narrative is a recurring theme throughout the exhibition, and one that undoubtedly motivates the photographers themselves. Featured entrant Douglas Gimesy, another Australian photojournalist, cites changing people’s behaviour as a central driver for his projects.In his tender image Caring for Joey, Gimesy underlines the ongoing issue of high-speed kangaroo road deaths on Kangaroo Island in the hope of advocating for improved governance and community awareness. It’s a sentiment that surely resonates with photographers and visitors to the exhibit alike, as they contemplate the wild theatre of our natural environment, and the diverse species that share in it.This article was originally published by Mathew Berg and Jessica Williams on TheConversation. Read the original story.
Atmospheric carbon levels are probably stuck at 400 parts per million, scientists say.
مكان الرب في الدماغ from wissam mohammed on Vimeo.
وثائقي يتناول موضوع الدين بطريقة علمية بحتة .
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IDor_kR1VkI)
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NbwbD8JcJgY)
قدّاس تأبين الحلم الأمريكي from أحمد الشرماني on Vimeo.
في سلسلة من المقابلات التي تمتد أربع سنوات، يناقش الناقد الاجتماعي اليساري نعوم تشومسكي كيف تركزت الثروة والسلطة بين نخبة صغيرة قد استقطبت المجتمع الأمريكي وأدت إلى تراجع الطبقة الوسطى
German physicists took a giant step toward a new type of clean, limitless energy through nuclear fusion by successfully starting up a revolutionary fusion reactor called the Wendelstein 7-X. The ma...
"LILA" from Carlos Lascano on Vimeo.
Lila is the character of a short film that somehow completes a sort of aesthetic trilogy I have started in 2008 with “A short love story in Stop Motion” vimeo.com/877053 and then followed in 2011 with “A shadow of blue” vimeo.com/29573040 I had the pleasure to have the talented Sandy Lavallart composing this beautiful music sandylavallart.com You can take a look at the backstage here: vimeo.com/75723266
لمس الفراغ from أحمد الشرماني on Vimeo.
في العام 1985 قرر المغامران البريطانيان جو سيمبسون وسيمون ياتيس تسلق جبل «سيولا غراندي» في مرتفعات الأنديز في البيرو البالغ ارتفاع أعلى قمة فيها نحو 6344 متراً، وبعد نجاح مغامرتهما ووصولهما إلى القمة بدأ بالانحدار، هنا حدثت الكارثة عندما انزلق سيمبسون بشكل مفاجئ ما أدى إلى كسر ساقه وجرح يديه، هنا حاول صديقة ياتيس سحبه من الأسفل وذلك بمساعدة حبل من قطعتين بطول نحو 90 متراً إلّا أنه لم يستطع بسبب عدم وضوح الرؤية والظروف الجوية الصعبة مع حلول الظلام واشتداد البرودة وعدم سماع زميله، وبشكل مثير للجدل قطع ياتيس الحبل الذي يربطه بصديقه ما أدى إلى سقوط سيبمسون في صدع بالجبل وأصيب بعدة إصابات، هنا ظن ياتيس أن صديقه مات فقرر النزول من الجبل وعاد إلى معسكر المتسلقين، ليلتقي برفاقه الذين ألقوا باللوم عليه، معتقدين جميعًا وفاة زميلهم، ليمضي ثلاثة أيام من العذاب مع الحزن والشعور بالذنب للتخلي عن (سيمبسون)، لكن المفاجأة أن سيمبسون كان قادراً على النزول إلى أسفل الجرف الجليدي الذي استقر عليه، حيث أمضى 3 أيام في سحب نفسه عبر 8 كيلو مترات من التضاريس الوعرة بلا طعام أو ماء وبألم شديد ليصل للمعسكر، قبل لحظات من مغادرة أصدقائه له
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTAJSuhgZxA)
The Red Drum Getaway from Gump on Vimeo.
A Hitchcock mashup where Kubrick is the villain. "Jimmy was having a rather beautiful day until he bumped into Jack and things got weird." Directed by: Adrien Dezalay, Emmanuel Delabaere, Simon Philippe.
Gump website: gump.tv Gump blog: gumptv.tumblr.com Gump on Facebook: facebook.com/gumpstudio