@iPolak: Dude, chill.
@iPolak: Dude, chill.
Kinda like corn starch & water? Is this a non-Newtonian fluid?
@Xavier_32: I have a Novint Falcon. It wasn't that much, (about $170 or so)
This is good news for me. I didn't jump on that bandwagon when it was available, and people were telling me to see it in 3d. Now I can, and probably still won't.
@RockyRan: Immersion is about fostering deep mental involvement. This seemed to do the opposite—instead of actively taking part in the game, Stephen was constantly reminding himself that he was supposed to be moving, as opposed to watching. What's more, when he did begin interacting, it felt unnatural.
SHE'S MY FRIEND!!
@Misfit7707: I wanted to post it again, so I did, DON'T JUDGE ME!
@Geisrud: THAT DOES NOT FEMPUTE
@The5thElephant: I appreciate your wishful thinking, but I think it's the niche markets that drive innovation. I don't think he stuck with a bike because he thought it would rake in more money—the inventor probably operated with personal practicability in mind. Now that it's been made, people who have a special drive…
I don't care how strong that bend is, that bike is unique enough that it will get stolen lickety split.
@blehbleh13: I think it may be marketed to those missing a hand.
@♥AntiSocialSocialite♥: WOOOO CHICAGO REPRESENT!!!
Kinda like Pandora for video? Count me in.
@SJRNWT: That comment made my day... Here you go
That thing looks awesome!!! I feel like I could fly away with it.
hehehehe....
@bugarthentho: As someone who's experimented with ferrofluids before, my guess is yes. But the best way of getting spikes is NOT with a tiny magnet like the one in the article's video. To get a mound of spikes, the best option is a large ceramic magnet with a larger magnetic field. Unless you have a hockey puck sized…
Nickelodeon did this years ago!
The case looks awesome, except for the top button (and the side buttons I presume have a similar predicament).