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A Nosebone frontside air is a frontside air where the skater straights or “bones out” the front leg. Invented by Neil Blender, but popularized by Chris Miller. Indy Nosebone is the backside version. Nosegrab: The Nosegrab is similar to the Tailgrab, however, instead of grabbing the tail (back) of the board, you grab the nose (front).
A Fastplant is a high-speed backside foot-plant, boosting, and put back on the tail well before the board re-enters the ramp/pool/bank. Invented by Neil Blender. F/S Footplant is a frontside air with your back foot planting on the coping. Basically, an Indyplant going frontside. Feeble
Blender is available for Windows 8.1 and above, and Mac OS X 10.13 and above. [243] [244] Blender 2.80 was the last release that had a version for 32-bit systems (x86). [245] Blender 2.76b was the last supported release for Windows XP, and version 2.63 was the last supported release for PowerPC.
An illegal shell game performed with bottle caps on Fulton Street in New York City. The shell game (also known as thimblerig, three shells and a pea, the old army game) is a public gambling game that challenges players to follow the movement of a marker hidden under one of several covers (shells).
Each metaball is defined as a function in n dimensions (e.g., for three dimensions, (,,); three-dimensional metaballs tend to be most common, with two-dimensional implementations popular as well).
Rigs of Rods (RoR) is a free and open source [1] vehicle-simulation game which uses soft-body physics to simulate the motion destruction and deformation of vehicles. The game uses a soft-body physics engine to simulate a network of interconnected nodes (forming the chassis and the wheels) and gives the ability to simulate deformable objects.
The tail rotor system rotates airfoils, small wings called blades, that vary in pitch in order to vary the amount of thrust they produce.The blades most often utilize a composite material construction, such as a core made of aluminum honeycomb or plasticized paper honeycomb, covered in a skin made of aluminum or carbon fiber composite.
Produced in Macromedia's (Adobe's) Flash format, a number of the cartoons are interactive, such as "Gerbil in a Microwave" and "Frog in a Blender". [4] "Frog in a Blender" has been downloaded at least 110 million times. [5] Before the dotcom crash, the site was said to be making $25,000 per month from banner advertising. [6]