Wanna see something cool #2

cmartinez

Joined Jan 17, 2007
8,783
Twenty years ago, a French man named Emile Leray, then a 43-year-old former electrician, found himself stuck in a Moroccan desert near a city called Tan-Tan after hitting his Citroen 2CV on a big rock, destroying the front axle and the chassis. The closest village was not within walking distance and Leray found himself in a precautions situation. How was he going to get back to humanity?
 

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Tonyr1084

Joined Sep 24, 2015
9,744
Part 3 of the marble clock. Personal comment, it seems to take more than 2 minutes to change the numbers, so as a practical clock - no. But it's a dang neat build for sure.
 

WBahn

Joined Mar 31, 2012
32,906
Part 3 of the marble clock. Personal comment, it seems to take more than 2 minutes to change the numbers, so as a practical clock - no. But it's a dang neat build for sure.
Just looking at the picture, it looks like it updates every four minutes -- the next set of marbles looks like it is going to produce '14:20'.
 

cmartinez

Joined Jan 17, 2007
8,783
Here's a related note:

In person, the effect Samsung's transparent micro OLED displays have is hard to describe, as content almost looks like a hologram as it floats in mid-air. The demo unit was freestanding and measured only about a centimeter thick, which adds even more to the illusion of a floating screen. Additionally, because of micro LEDs high pixel density, images also looked incredibly sharp. So far Samsung has only uploaded a single vertical video overflowing with EDM, but hopefully it gives you some idea what we saw

The bad news is that with Samsung's current crop of non-transparent MicroLED TVs currently costing $150,000 for a 110-inch model, it's going to be a decently long time until these new displays become anything close to affordable.
 

WBahn

Joined Mar 31, 2012
32,906
Imagine stacking a bunch of these together so that you have a true 3D display. Of course, the z-axis resolution would suck, but I bet some processing tricks plus the human eye could go a long way towards overcoming that. It would also depend just how clear they actually are, too. Over time, the thickness and clarity will likely both improve.
 

cmartinez

Joined Jan 17, 2007
8,783
Imagine stacking a bunch of these together so that you have a true 3D display. Of course, the z-axis resolution would suck, but I bet some processing tricks plus the human eye could go a long way towards overcoming that. It would also depend just how clear they actually are, too. Over time, the thickness and clarity will likely both improve.
On trick I've noticed with complicated three-dimensional transparent images, is that they're a bit difficult to discern at first, but if you slowly rotate the perspective back and forth, the brain quickly constructs what's being seen into an understandable visual model.
 

MrChips

Joined Oct 2, 2009
34,862
The two holy grails of modern science, engineering and technology solved, room temperature super conductivity and nuclear fusion, coming soon in your next episode.
 
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