Functional Thin Films on Surfaces: stanford bunny gets covered in white slime tech
12 replies, posted
[media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfC-oBu-4ho[/media]
I'm quite impressed, all you need is for the slime to drip and you got ghostbusters ectoplasm all over the walls.
Is this just a simulation of fluids dripping down surfaces?
Why is covering the Stanford bunny with curiously thick white slime to popular with liquid physics tech demos?
[QUOTE=H4ngman;48010109]Why is covering the Stanford bunny with curiously thick white slime to popular with liquid physics tech demos?[/QUOTE]
Why is the Utah teapot so popular in modelling?
Why is "Hello world!" so popular in programming?
Why is the Wilhelm Scream so popular in movies?
[editline]20th June 2015[/editline]
I don't get the dumbs unless you're being pedantic or something.
[QUOTE=elevate;48010115]I don't get the dumbs unless you're being pedantic or something.[/QUOTE]
maybe it's because that has absolutely nothing to do with his post
[QUOTE=elevate;48010115]Why is the Utah teapot so popular in modelling?
Why is "Hello world!" so popular in programming?
[b]Why is the Wilhelm Scream so popular in movies?[/b]
[editline]20th June 2015[/editline]
I don't get the dumbs unless you're being pedantic or something.[/QUOTE]
Oh right, the slime-covered-bunny was actually in the Warner Brothers effects library when Bill Burtt recognized it in a few movies started putting into peoples tech demos as a joke, and later directors would pick up and continue with it.
Oh wait, no because that's a totally different thing.
[editline]20th June 2015[/editline]
Neat demo though. Although I'd like to see what happens when they pour the slime, but change the viscosity while its dripping.
[QUOTE=L0en31;48010332]maybe it's because that has absolutely nothing to do with his post[/QUOTE]
It does? Both the teapot and "Hello world" are test objects and in-jokes within their respective fields. The Stanford bunny is another example of this.
[editline]20th June 2015[/editline]
[QUOTE=MedicWine;48010419]Oh right, the slime-covered-bunny was actually in the Warner Brothers effects library when Bill Burtt recognized it in a few movies started putting into peoples tech demos as a joke, and later directors would pick up and continue with it.
Oh wait, no because that's a totally different thing.[/QUOTE]
This I can understand though, as the Wilhelm scream isn't used as part of a test. Although the hostility directed towards me makes me feel like I visited a foreign country and broken some kind of highly revered taboo that I don't understand.
[QUOTE=elevate;48010600]It does? Both the teapot and "Hello world" are test objects and in-jokes within their respective fields. The Stanford bunny is another example of this.[/QUOTE]
Dude he was talkin' about the slime lookin' like man goo
[QUOTE=Zillamaster55;48010799]Dude he was talkin' about the slime lookin' like man goo[/QUOTE]
Maybe that's a standard thing in liquid physics tests? Without the innuendo of course.
He admitted it himself.
[QUOTE=elevate;48010814]Maybe that's a standard thing in liquid physics tests? Without the innuendo of course.
He admitted it himself.[/QUOTE]
It isn't.
[QUOTE=paul simon;48010914]It isn't.[/QUOTE]
Well there you go.
That's absolutely fascinating! I don't even want to know what physics and maths go into that, calculations must be pretty intense if it's going at a per point / per pixel basis
[QUOTE=elevate;48010065]Is this just a simulation of fluids dripping down surfaces?[/QUOTE]
it's done so preserving the shape of the fluid while looking like it's attached to the surface and could be done in shaders then having common fluid simulation.
[QUOTE=elevate;48010600]It does? Both the teapot and "Hello world" are test objects and in-jokes within their respective fields. The Stanford bunny is another example of this.
[/QUOTE]
said in the white paper "vanilla sauce", so either they made an innuendo first or I did. But it's really cool regardless.
white paper: [url]http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/~mirela/publications/func_thin_films.pdf[/url]
from: [url]http://mirela.net.technion.ac.il/publications/[/url]
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