

Design for movies only have to look good for a few minutes of close-up, and there are many tricks for making them look better in those few minutes.
Design for movies only have to look good for a few minutes of close-up, and there are many tricks for making them look better in those few minutes.
Also, for printing LEGO-like bricks, you can use a smaller printer, and focus on quality
Mythbusters.
Some science mixed in with copious amounts of blowing things up and wild problem solving.
The difference between messing around vs science is writing things down!
Sure! Might stir up some activity over there. I wouldn’t mind running my username again through whatever is free to see what images I get back this time
ImageAI had a fun post where you input your username as a prompt and see what comes of it. Tadaa, perfect profile picture
Shudders* Yeah, humanoid robots that can do advanced human style fighting pale in comparison.
1 car accident 2 age related (heart attack, cancer, getting sick when too old to deal with normal sicknesses) 3 firearms accident 4 house fire 5 underestimating a sickness Edit to add 6 workplace accident (manufacturing)
Idk, whatever I can come up with would probably have massive unintended negative consequences.
It should have something like a Miata or Caterham or a hot hatch of some kind.
A typewriter and an empty space where a sporty car should go
Yeah, I think once you get to the point where the car needs the frame worked on, it’s probably going to get scrapped whether it has a cast frame or not.
Has anyone come up with a guess on the cost of swapping out an entire cast body section vs replacing or refurbishing the parts that would be there without the cast?
A few minutes of close-up. Otherwise, medium to far shots, shots where the camera is moving enough that a few blemishes in the robot won’t show up, or the focus is on another character in the shot.