I left school when I was 16 and got a job in North London doing my hobby of “making 3D” because Jez gave me a chance @ArgonautGames_
Whatever you love doing, keep at it because the rest falls into place ❤️
https://t.co/qxIKbB29i2
~10 years ago, back in 2014, Sony announced Project Morpheus (later Playstation VR). There was a spirit of intense competition, but also collaboration - Oculus and Sony always swapped demos.
Sony actually paid for all the indie game dev booths at the Tokyo Game Show for many years, even ones that had nothing to do with Playstation. Even the ones who were only on competing platforms like Oculus! That is just the kind of guy @yosp was.
I can't stop staring at this 😭🔥
@Cartesian_C broke down the mimic effect — procedural curves that move, twist, and displace in real time. No simulation. Just nodes.
The fact that this comes with a full tutorial breakdown makes it even better 🙌
Save this Geometry Nodes workflows 👇
#Blender3D #B3D #GeometryNodes #ProceduralArt #BlenderTutorial #CurveAnimation #BlenderTips
Rick Rubin on the power of creating something truly for yourself
Elon Musk has said that Rick Rubin’s philosophy of creating something truly for yourself is how Tesla creates products.
Rick elaborates on this philosophy in the clip below:
“My only goal is to make something that I like, and I know that I can keep working on it until I like it. So in some ways there’s no pressure.”
Rick doesn’t consider the audience at all:
“The audience comes last… I’m not making it for them. I’m making it for me. And it turns out that when you make something truly for yourself, you’re doing the best thing you possibly can for the audience.”
He argues that this is why there are so many bad movies today:
“So many big movies are just not good. It’s because they’re are not being made by a person who cares about it. They’re being made by people who are trying to make something they think someone else will like. And that’s not how art works.”
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt argues a similar point:
"If you think about the greatest products, they've almost always been designed for the benefit of the people who are actually building them.”
Uber started out as a private timeshare limousine service for Garrett Camp and his friends. Microsoft started when Bill Gates and Paul Allen wrote a Basic interpreter for the Altair so they didn’t have to write machine language to program it. Drew Houston built Dropbox to make his files live online after forgetting his USB stick. Larry Page and Sergey Brin built Google for Stanford—and particularly for themselves—with the first server in Larry’s dorm room.
Source: @LewisHowes (Nov 2023)
This is the greatest video I’ve ever seen. No notes. The lifeless clanker carcass just laying there. No crowd reaction, anything. Just Billie Jean. Until its lifeless shell is shamefully dragged off. Purely amazing.