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2011 Most IDM Tournament


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2011 Most IDM Tournament Opening Matches  

82 members have voted

  1. 1. Bracket 1

    • Abandoned Soviet Monuments
    • Unflatable Pony
  2. 2. Bracket 1

    • Expendable Cosmonauts
    • Uninhabited Islands
  3. 3. Bracket 1

    • The Fourth Dimension
    • A Watch Only You Can Read
  4. 4. Bracket 1

    • Underground Lakes of Dry Ice on Mars
    • The German Language
  5. 5. Bracket 1

  6. 6. Bracket 1

    • Audio Paradoxes
    • LTM Forum on April 1st
  7. 7. Bracket 1

    • Straandbeest
    • The Logarithmic Spiral
  8. 8. Bracket 1

    • Smoking a Pipe Inside a Space Helmet
    • Going to Tosche Station to Pick Up Power Converters
  9. 9. Bracket 2

    • Theory That The Higgs Boson Traveled Back In Time To Prevent Its Discovery
    • Bleu Cheese
  10. 10. Bracket 2

    • Philip K. Dick
    • Julian Assange's Hair
  11. 11. Bracket 2

    • Never Agreeing On What's IDM
    • Sun Ra
  12. 12. Bracket 2

  13. 13. Bracket 2

  14. 14. Bracket 2

  15. 15. Bracket 2

  16. 16. Bracket 2

    • 1 Dimensional Universe
    • Agoraphobia
  17. 17. Bracket 3

  18. 18. Bracket 3

  19. 19. Bracket 3

    • Teleportation
    • Head Transplanting
  20. 20. Bracket 3

    • Ulilillia
    • Reverse Space Lightning Rods
  21. 21. Bracket 3

  22. 22. Bracket 3

  23. 23. Bracket 3

    • Soviet Cyborg
    • Really Cool Architecture
  24. 24. Bracket 3

    • Robot Trees
    • The Tuss Email Interview
  25. 25. Bracket 4

  26. 26. Bracket 4

    • Transit Maps
    • Not Listening to IDM
  27. 27. Bracket 4

  28. 28. Bracket 4

    • Exoskeleton for the Elderly
    • Egyptian Protester Hats
  29. 29. Bracket 4

  30. 30. Bracket 4

  31. 31. Bracekt 4

    • Stephen Hawking at Zero G
    • 3D Glass Paintings
  32. 32. Bracket 4



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Guest analogue wings

BREAKING NEWS - STRANDBEEST KILLS BIN LADEN

 

http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/03/strandbeests-birthed-from-3d-printer-pop-out-ready-to-walk-vide/

 

Strandbeests birthed from 3D printer pop out ready to walk

 

3dprinter-strandsbeest.jpg

 

While designer Theo Jansen's dreams of a race of independently multiplying Strandbeests is more than just a little bit out there, it seems he has found a way to streamline production of the rather fascinating self-propelled creatures. In language that is unique to Jansen's relationship with the things, he explains the impact of 3D printing on the Strandbeest production process as such: "Strandbeests have found a way to multiply by injecting their digital DNA directly into the Shapeways system." The 3D printed versions of his strolling mechanisms, known as Animaris Geneticus Parvus, are now available in the Shapeways store, and require zero post-printing assembly.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nt8oHv09e_k

 

3D printed instant no-assembly-required-strandbeest = IDM POWER UP

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no I am saying Sun Ra rules, and is more IDM than most anything. especially a statement.

 

 

word.

 

swag.jpg

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people who troll this competition are annoying. think about it. ulillillia is so fucking idm.

 

I'd be willing to give reverse space lightening rods a shot if ANYONE told us what they are. But it's just like a not that funny joke. Sorry, i guess i shouldn't take :braindance: so seriously but still :nacmat:

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people who troll this competition are annoying. think about it. ulillillia is so fucking idm.

 

I'd be willing to give reverse space lightening rods a shot if ANYONE told us what they are. But it's just like a not that funny joke. Sorry, i guess i shouldn't take :braindance: so seriously but still :nacmat:

 

 

 

Grizzlies_Clippers_Bas(8)_t607.JPG

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people who troll this competition are annoying. think about it. ulillillia is so fucking idm.

 

I'd be willing to give reverse space lightening rods a shot if ANYONE told us what they are. But it's just like a not that funny joke. Sorry, i guess i shouldn't take :braindance: so seriously but still :nacmat:

 

i'll field this one. the extremely dry atmosphere on mars and the moon means that rovers can be damaged by static electricity acquired during movement, so nasa designed a reverse lightning rod consisting of loads of titanium wires that ground the rovers which prevents this from happening.

 

Have you ever walked across a wool carpet in leather-soled shoes on a dry winter day, and then reached out toward a doorknob? ZAP! A stinging spark leaps between your fingers and the metal knob.

That's static discharge--lightning writ small.

Static discharge is merely annoying to anyone on Earth living where winters have exceptionally low humidity. But to astronauts on the Moon or on Mars, static discharge could be real trouble.

 

"On Mars, we think the soil is so dry and insulating that if an astronaut were out walking, once he or she returned to the habitat and reached out to open the airlock, a little lightning bolt might zap critical electronics," explains Geoffrey A. Landis, a physicist with the Photovoltaics and Space Environmental Effects Branch at NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio.

This phenomenon is called triboelectric charging.

The prefix "tribo" (pronounced TRY-bo) means "rubbing." When certain pairs of unlike materials, such as wool and hard shoe-sole leather, rub together, one material gives up some of its electrons to the other material. The separation of charge can create a strong electric field.

Here on Earth, the air around us and the clothes we wear usually have enough humidity to be decent electrical conductors, so any charges separated by walking or rubbing have a ready path to ground. Electrons bleed off into the ground instead of accumulating on your body.

 

But when air and materials are extraordinarily dry, such as on a dry winter's day, they are excellent insulators, so there is no ready pathway to ground. Your body can accumulate negative charges, possibly up to an amazing 20 thousand volts. If you touch a conductor, such as a metal doorknob, then--ZAP!--all the accumulated electrons discharge at once.

On the Moon and on Mars, conditions are ideal for triboelectric charging. The soil is drier than desert sand on Earth. That makes it an excellent electrical insulator. Moreover, the soil and most materials used in spacesuits and spacecraft (e.g., aluminized mylar, neoprene-coated nylon, Dacron, urethane-coated nylon, tricot, and stainless steel) are completely unlike each other. When astronauts walk or rovers roll across the ground, their boots or wheels gather electrons as they rub through the gravel and dust. Because the soil is insulating, providing no path to ground, a space suit or rover can build up tremendous triboelectric charge, whose magnitude is yet unknown. And when the astronaut or vehicle gets back to base and touches metal--ZAP! The lights in the base may go out, or worse.

Physicist Joseph Kolecki and colleagues at NASA Glenn first noticed this problem in the late 1990s before Mars Pathfinder was launched. "When we ran a prototype wheel of the Sojourner rover over simulated Martian dust in a simulated Martian atmosphere, we found it charged up to hundreds of volts," he recalls.

That discovery so concerned the scientists that they modified Pathfinder's rover design, adding needles half an inch long, made of ultrathin (0.0001-inch diameter) tungsten wire sharpened to a point, at the base of antennas. The needles would allow any electric charge that built up on the rover to bleed off into the thin Martian atmosphere, "like a miniature lightning rod operating in reverse," explains Carlos Calle, lead scientist at NASA's Electrostatics and Surface Physics Laboratory at Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Similar protective needles were also installed on the Spirit and Opportunity rovers.

 

On the Moon, "Apollo astronauts never reported being zapped by electrostatic discharges," notes Calle. "However, future lunar missions using large excavation equipment to move lots of dry dirt and dust could produce electrostatic fields. Because there's no atmosphere on the Moon, the fields could grow quite strong. Eventually, discharges could occur in vacuum."

"On Mars," he continues, "discharges can happen at no more than a few hundred volts. It's likely that these will take the form of coronal glows rather than lightning bolts. As such, they may not be life threatening for the astronauts, but they could be harmful to electronic equipment."

So what's the solution to this problem?

Here on Earth, it's simple: we minimize static discharge by grounding electrical systems. Grounding them means literally connecting them to Earth--pounding copper rods deep into the ground. Ground rods work well in most places on Earth because several feet deep the soil is damp, and is thus a good conductor. The Earth itself provides a "sea of electrons," which neutralizes everything connected to it, explains Calle.

There's no moisture, though, in the soil of the Moon or Mars. Even the ice believed to permeate Martian soil wouldn't help, as "frozen water is not a terribly good conductor," says Landis. So ground rods would be ineffective in establishing a neutral "common ground" for a lunar or Martian colony.

On Mars, the best ground might be, ironically, the air. A tiny radioactive source "such as that used in smoke detectors," could be attached to each spacesuit and to the habitat, suggests Landis. Low-energy alpha particles would fly off into the rarefied atmosphere, hitting molecules and ionizing them (removing electrons). Thus, the atmosphere right around the habitat or astronaut would become conductive, neutralizing any excess charge.

 

Achieving a common ground on the Moon would be trickier, where there's not even a rarefied atmosphere to help bleed off the charge. Instead, a common ground might be provided by burying a huge sheet of foil or mesh of fine wires, possibly made of aluminum (which is highly conductive and could be extracted from lunar soil), underneath the entire work area. Then all the habitat's walls and apparatus would be electrically connected to the aluminum.

Research is still preliminary. So ideas differ amongst the physicists who are seeking, well, some common ground.

 

http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2005/10aug_crackling/

 

very, very IDM

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Fucking Power Convertors at Tosche Station losing to SPISH. Horseshit!

 

can't front though, i am happy that Ulilllllillla wont make it out of the first round.

kamikaze-ii-shawn-kemp-2.jpg

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This topic has been closed by a moderator.


Reason: First Round Is Complete! Off to Round 2!

 

If you feel the reason for closing it was incorrect, please report this post, and a moderator or administrator will reconsider it. Kind regards, We Are The Music Makers Forums Staff

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