Even the way the cars moved in this video looked...floaty. These ultra photorealistic graphics are really cool but I think you nailed it talking about facial expressions, mechanics, and I would add animations in general. It will be even more jarring when everything looks so real.
theragu40
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It can be easy to forget that while the onion is often one of the funniest things out there, it remains and always has been a satirical newspaper first. And sometimes satire needs to bite more than amuse in order to be truly effective.
When you consider that the root cause of both problems (owning a Dodge RAM truck and driving drunk) is absolutely terrible judgement, this correlation becomes rather self evident.
Where it can be frustrating is when you get pressed for advice or an opinion after first saying you don't have an opinion or trying not to commit to something knowing the person won't like your opinion.
If I get pressed to give an answer then I'm going to sit and figure out what seems to me to be the best way to do things. That takes consideration and time, it takes energy, which I'm happy to give if I'm taken seriously. When people take what I say, and then say "ok I'm still going to do it this other way" with no rationale, then essentially they just insisted that I waste my time. Why do that? Just don't ask me then, or take me at face value when I say I don't know or don't have an opinion.
I'm an introvert, interactions take a lot of energy. It's so draining to be forced to consider something then be ignored. I don't think I'm being arrogant, I just don't want someone to intentionally waste my time and treat me like my opinion doesn't matter after making me go out of my way to figure out their issue and come up with a solution.
Every time there is snow we make damn sure to get our kids outside to enjoy it. I hate to say it out loud but at the rate we're going I'm not at all certain we'll still have snow here in a few years. And I'm in Wisconsin, we're supposed to be part of the frozen north.
Every single year winter gets milder. It snows later and thaws earlier. I have to make sure my sump pump is ready to run year round. We used to ice fish around Thanksgiving. Now I barely get to go ice fishing at all unless I drive north a couple hours.
Every good engineer I have ever worked with googles things. To me it's actually a red flag if someone doesn't Google stuff. That tells me they think they know everything, or that they would rather punt than learn. I think googling is a critical job skill for IT.
I was never a direct manager, but I've been in on the hiring process for many candidates. Great advice, top to bottom.
When we interviewed we also liked to hear people say they'd Google it. It seems stupid but I want someone with the initiative to find the solution to a problem they've never seen.
Also the thing about ownership is key, and for us was always an indicator of someone who might want to move up later. Help desk folks who want to move up do everything they can feasibly do and offer their take on what they think the next level needs to do before escalating. If it truly needs to be handed off then it's because of permissions. But the best help desk people try to hang on to the ticket as long as they can so they can provide the most consistency to the end user.
He's saying we would never have an oil spill equivalent to the amount of oil that is used because we try very hard not to spill oil. It is expensive and damaging.
If you are asking a hypothetical question comparing the amount of oil in a spill and its damage to the environment vs simply using that oil normally, I think the oil spill wins in a landslide for being the most damaging.
These comments are all talking about whether it's good advice or not.
The core issue is offering unsolicited advice on a matter that is deeply personal and that is none of anyone else's fucking business. Forget about whether or not this person should or shouldn't have kids. No one needs to be telling anyone else what they ought to do about topics on which they cannot possibly have the proper context to offer such advice.
From a pure graphical fidelity point we're there now.
From an animation standpoint we are light years away. The absolute best animations or facial expression renders I have seen are nowhere near good enough to actually pass for real. And honestly I am not sure I've even seen meaningful improvement in this area in a long time. Even in this demo videos the cars don't look quite right as they move, and cars are much easier than people, or the way cloth moves when on someone who is moving.
I'd like to think this is the next big focus for graphics, but animations are a lot harder to get right than pure visual fidelity. I hope studios start focusing on it because it will take take us to that next step.