Demo of ATI PhysX Hack.
The modified files, with an Nvidia card, enables hardware Accelerated PhysX on an ati card.
Demo of ATI PhysX Hack.
The modified files, with an Nvidia card, enables hardware Accelerated PhysX on an ati card.
Perhaps one of the funniest moments in classic film.
Something I was working on.
I modified the novint falcon Quake 1 script to work (with basic functionality for now) with quake 2.
I'd really appreciate it if you'd go to the video's page and thumb up the video and comment on it :3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGttwM-kvoc
Last edited by Llama Juice; July 4th, 2010 at 12:19 AM.
and Bod after a couple of strongbows.
Last edited by =sw=warlord; July 4th, 2010 at 07:04 PM.
Awesome^
You guys really gotta hear this. Planets naturally produce their own magnetic vibrations that can be interpreted as sound.
Fascinating recording of Jupiter sounds (electromagnetic "voices") by NASA-Voyager. The complex interactions of charged electromagnetic particles from the solar wind , planetary magnetosphere etc. create vibration "soundscapes". It sounds very interesting, even scary.
Jupiter is mostly composed of hydrogen and helium. The entire planet is made of gas, with no solid surface under the atmosphere. The pressures and temperatures deep in Jupiter are so high that gases form a gradual transition into liquids which are gradually compressed into a metallic "plasma" in which the molecules have been stripped of their outer electrons. The winds of Jupiter are a thousand metres per second relative to the rotating interior. Jupiter's magnetic field is four thousand times stronger than Earth's, and is tipped by 11° degrees of axis spin. This causes the magnetic field to wobble, which has a profound effect on trapped electronically charged particles. This plasma of charged particles is accelerated beyond the magnetosphere of Jupiter to speeds of tens of thousands of kilometres per second. It is these magnetic particle vibrations which generate some of the sound you hear on this recording.
truly an otherworldly sound
That's amazing. I wonder what Earth sounds like?
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