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Search Result for: moves Cool
Wow. These guys have some amazing moves. If you remember, I also posted a while back a russian dude, doing this kind of things in his country. I'd say it was cooler, but this isn't half bad. It's still action packed! Enjoy!
This guy has some awesome brakedance moves. The star of those moves is by far the head spinning. He's able to hold his balance while spinning for a massive amount of time. It's a really cool video, so I think you'll like it!
Here's a really cool kinetic sculpture that actually moves. The author of this kinetic sculpture is Theo Jansen. His kinetic sculpture is truly an art form, so enjoy this video clip!
Funny
I don't know if this was for real, or just another fake, but that Santa sure does have some karate moves. Anyway, those guys were asking for it big time! Enjoy
Now that's a pretty talented little parrot, and it has some good moves to impress the girls. Go Frostee Go!
Big in Japan
A cool but rather strange video of Japan's Olympic diving team showing off some moves in a robotized fashion. The end result is pretty spectacular, especially from the underwater point of view. Enjoy the show!
Well, I couldn't believe it when I saw this Japanese fish training video clip, but it seems true. The fish have been trained in recognizing the movements of their trainer, and executing specific moves. This Japanese fish training video clip is really cool, and worth watching, so enjoy it!
Tech
I've got to say, that those little guys pack in some moves. They probably aren't autonomous, but the moves they pull, and the fact that they get up extremely easy, compensates for it. Really cool, and impressive moves!
Technology and Health News
Even a visual stimulus extremely short, less than millisecond, affects the decoding of information in the nervous system.
The Ferrari of insects, the horsefly, a tiny acrobat who moves at high speed, has proved that even a very short visual stimulus (on the scale of milliseconds) affects decoding information in the nervous system. This was discovered by scientists in universities of Indiana, Princeton (New Jersey) and the Los Alamos National Laboratory (New Mexico), one of the largest multidisciplinary institutions in the world.
A human being is unable to record the continuous change of scenery and should have a supra-sensory stimulation. But this is a fly: its nervous system processes information very quickly so that the insect can adapt to what he sees with a reaction time of 30 milliseconds. "During the flight," says Ruyter van Steveninck University of Indiana, "the horsefly must quickly analyze a number of complex information and, because of its ability to move rapidly, it is reasonable to think that the way it deciphers level sensory-motor data is optimal. We then decided to study its visual system to understand how his brain can order a continuous stream of very complex data in such an efficient way. "
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