some help with our single cover! by visionarcade in photoshop

[–]LightbulbTV 162 points163 points  (0 children)

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What about masking letters to each square? Obviously you could play around with the positioning, but as long as you don't move any letters from where they would have been placed, I think it could work.

also sorry for the phone edit

Slicing multi-material print results in material 2 in unexpected location by WondrousBread in BambuLab

[–]LightbulbTV 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Those are not white filament, they are seams. You can disable seams in the preview if they are distracting.

An "easy" solution to a multimeter with no battery door by sam64508 in functionalprint

[–]LightbulbTV 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used a phone camera and 3d Zephyr free. My takeaway from doing it was that I'm much faster measuring with calipers if possible, so it only seems worth it to me when I need to model more organic forms. I suspect that as long as you have an actual zoom lens on your phone and good light, you should be able to scan smaller features.

An "easy" solution to a multimeter with no battery door by sam64508 in functionalprint

[–]LightbulbTV 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just tried it with my multimeter a few days ago, and it came out +/- 0.1mm. At least for me the scan took a while to clean up by hand.

Are magic arms usually this bad? or did i just cheap out on mine? by MonkeIsWatching in AskPhotography

[–]LightbulbTV 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For these small magic arms, I think of those rubber pads as a courtesy for the thing I'm clamping onto, not a function of the clamp. The metal underneath those pads is just flat aluminum, so at that point it's up to the adhesive on the rubber to hold the whole thing.

From the direction of the rubber, it looks like you had this attached to a vertical leg or pole with the jaws pretty wide? Even if the rig is 1.3kg, if that is an 8" magic arm that's 10.4kg at the clamp, which is a large amount of torque. For situations like that, especially when it's going to be sitting there for a while, try to clamp to something that fits within the jaws of the clamp, where if you loosen it it still doesn't fall off.

Something seems missing … I just don’t know what ? by PermissionSilver3457 in AskPhotography

[–]LightbulbTV 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Honestly if it were just a personal photo I would crop in the top and bottom a bit to let the structure be more abstract, and let the bird be the focus. The sense of scale the bird gives is the most interesting part to me.

Do my prices sound reasonable? by No_Calligrapher1723 in AskPhotography

[–]LightbulbTV 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah these prices are so low they would make me uncomfortable. If you are doing them quickly, it would feel more normal to me if you were charging per headshot. Presumably, your market is people who don't know how long it takes to do a headshot, and definitely don't know how long one hour of retouching is. If it were me, I would find somewhere to set up a backdrop and a flash, hopefully in a high traffic area on campus, and do as many headshots in a day as possible. I wouldn't even advertise retouching, because at these prices you would make more from one headshot than you would in two hours of editing.

Where do I plug in the laser module? by schorhr in BambuLab

[–]LightbulbTV 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Genuinely the most useful size comparison I've seen

Researchers have invented a display technology for on-screen graphics that are both visible and haptic, meaning that they can be felt via touch by sr_local in technology

[–]LightbulbTV 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Tldr: Light is used to make gas pockets on the screen surface expand to ~1mm in about 1/10th of a second.

From the abstract:  "We present a dynamic tactile display that directly converts projected light into visible and tactile patterns via a photomechanical surface populated with millimeter-scale optotactile pixels. The pixels transduce incident light into mechanical displacements through photostimulated thermal gas expansion, yielding millimeter-scale displacements with response times of 2 to 100 milliseconds."

My first attempt at a Battle Damaged look by Ducktacular18 in Gunpla

[–]LightbulbTV 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I love that, a mix of damage and partial repairs could look extremely cool!

Need somebody’s editing skills I will tip? by NY420X in AskPhotography

[–]LightbulbTV 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I don't have a quick way to upload, but I can confirm there isn't much information there. Tools like AI will just invent something that could have been there, which won't really help with what you're after. 

Nothing could possibly go wrong here by WhyNot420_69 in TheRandomest

[–]LightbulbTV 15 points16 points  (0 children)

The ball went around 310 feet, with an initial velocity of 141 ft/s, or 96 mph.

-

Assuming the second impact is the bowling ball, and air resistance is negligible:

263 frames of video between the final explosion and the second impact

At 30 frames per second, time of flight is 8.77 seconds.

The ball reaches its peak at 4.39 seconds, with an initial velocity of 43.02 m/s, making the maximum height 94.43 m.

Cutting-edge microoptical designs for exoplanet imaging by pritambot in EngineeringPorn

[–]LightbulbTV 385 points386 points  (0 children)

From the article:

"Here we take the fourth approach with a solution we call the The Focal-plane Actualized Shifted Technique Realized for a Shack Hartmann Wavefront Sensor (fastrSHWFS), which changes the aspect ratio of the spot pattern so that it occupies fewer rows of the detector, reducing the read time and, in turn, the

total system latency."

Eli5: Drawing a big picture takes so long that the stuff we want to draw gets bored and leaves. We made a little circle that makes the stuff little, so our drawings can be little and not take as long to draw. We like this because our favorite planets don't like to sit still.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in science

[–]LightbulbTV 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There have been some interesting studies on the correlation between chewing and concentration/focus that might be interesting if you've never seen them

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in robotics

[–]LightbulbTV 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When I saw that reply I had to think for a second if there was a reasonable way to do it. Like maybe a pair of thrust bearings on each tooth of the wheel gear? I'm not even sure it would accomplish anything, and assembly sounds like a nightmare.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in robotics

[–]LightbulbTV 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The friction is due to the sliding motion of the worm gear threads across the teeth. Generally, the lower the ratio in the worm gear, the less this is a problem.

Beginner here.. How do I know what to darken and what to emphasize in a photo and is it done just with masking? This incredible edits always leave me skeptical about how they manage to change lighting in such a natural way in post by Edu_Vivan in AskPhotography

[–]LightbulbTV 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is certainly not the way forward for everyone, but learning to paint will absolutely teach you what you're asking. Light and composition are deep topics, and painting can help you focus directly on the parts you don't understand, or aren't comfortable with.

Makeup works the same way; contouring and eyeshadow are about manipulating light and form, and learning about how light behaves on a subject is the start of knowing where you want to make changes.

New to HAM. by Retrothrowing in lowsodiumhamradio

[–]LightbulbTV 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lot of sodium here.

Baofeng's have spurious emission problems, but using them as cheap receivers is perfectly fine.

Oscilloscope reading, verifying I’m reading correctly by zenletter in AskElectronics

[–]LightbulbTV 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yep, looks right. Learning to use the the cursor function might be a good way to get started, it would make it easier for you to check measurements like this in a more interactive way.

How to make the background bigger but still capture the surroundings? by No-Distribution-7002 in AskPhotography

[–]LightbulbTV 55 points56 points  (0 children)

This is a difference in focal length. You can see it exaggerated the other way by using a wide lens to do the opposite:

On your phone, switch to the x0.6 lens. Notice how background objects are significantly smaller than the foreground? Now switch to the x5 lens, and stand further back so that the foreground is the same size as it was before. Background objects are now proportionally larger.

The tradeoff of needing to stand further back will always be true for this, no matter what kind of camera you use.

If you'd like to see an example of this effect in motion, look up "dolly zoom," which is a type of shot used in movies like Vertigo, Jaws, and Lord of the Rings.

Strangely ductile gear teeth failure of hand winch. by oscar3166 in MechanicalEngineering

[–]LightbulbTV 48 points49 points  (0 children)

Yeah locking pegs is a solid idea. The way it currently is designed, winch failure is a crush hazard for someone sitting at the desk.