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As described in an instructional article by Josh Petty: [3] Rigging is making our characters able to move. The process of rigging is we take that digital sculpture, and we start building the skeleton, the muscles, and we attach the skin to the character, and we also create a set of animation controls, which our animators use to push and pull the body around.
One of their most frequent application is to model particles moving inside nanodevices, for example quantum dots, [17] [18] pn-junctions, [19] antidot superlattices, [20] [21] among others. The reason for this broadly spread effectiveness of billiards as physical models resides on the fact that in situations with small amount of disorder or ...
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
On December 7, 1999, a special holiday version of the Big Mouth Billy Bass was released. The fish had a Santa hat on his head and a ribbon with a sleigh bell on his tail. [8] An anniversary edition followed in 2014. [9] [better source needed]
A billiard-ball computer, a type of conservative logic circuit, is an idealized model of a reversible mechanical computer based on Newtonian dynamics, proposed in 1982 by Edward Fredkin and Tommaso Toffoli. [1]
A screenshot of Iggy's Reckin' Balls on Nintendo 64. Iggy's Reckin' Balls is a simple racing game with tower-based levels. [4] The players must pull themselves up to the next level of a tower using a grappling hook, which can also be used to grab and slow down opponents. [4] [5] Each type of stage is divided into 10 towers. The players race up ...
Geodesic polyhedra are available as geometric primitives in the Blender 3D modeling software package, which calls them icospheres: they are an alternative to the UV sphere, having a more regular distribution. [4] [5] The Goldberg–Coxeter construction is an expansion of the concepts underlying geodesic polyhedra.
A Galilean cannon with proportions similar to the Astro Blaster. A Galilean cannon is a device that demonstrates conservation of linear momentum. [1] It comprises a stack of balls, starting with a large, heavy ball at the base of the stack and progresses up to a small, lightweight ball at the top.