This clever music video of the song "Bad Apple" peformed by Nomico consists of stop-motion animation. Each frame is printed, as you can see from the image file numbers ticking away.
Touhou fans are insane. I always thought so before, but this just confirms my suspicions.
I also don't really get the entire thing surrounding the characters... like I've played a few of the games and the story seems o.k. I guess, but to have this entire culture surrounding it? Crazy!
Ahhh man..I hope Touhou doesn't get too mainstream from CNN's feature lol :T Anyway the CNN thigny got this very very wrong, the computer animation went first, and then different versions were made by other people for fun, like this paper one.
Touhou Project is a shmup game for the computer by the way.. http://touhou.wikia.com/wiki/Touhou_Wiki (Sorry..for rambling lol. I just hate to see my favorite game series being misunderstood)
Very impressive... This must have taken ages. I made a video using the same technique two years ago, but I printed only a tiny fraction of the number of frames they did: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DgjeZB9biac
This question has actually already been answered in "The Ultimate Book of Notes and Queries" by Joseph Harker. It's an extract of all the best questions asked of the guardian newspaper. I don't remember the answer exactly, but basically you would have to be super-humanly fat to have any protection.
Actually their experiment is not very valid, and I consider it quite a waste of time for them.
Of course, for rifle bullets, feet and feet of fat would be necessary. However, for small arms (pistols and revolvers), the experiment is invalid, because:
- most pistol bullets aren't as heavy as the ball bearing they used. Ball bearings are usually made of steel. Bullets are lead, antimony and, sometimes copper. A steel ball bearing of the same size of a bullet is usually heavier than the bullet.
- The 9mm Luger is a fast cartridge, but doesn't come close to 500 m/s (usually, 350 m/s for a 124 gr bullet)
- Most people are shot by small arms, not rifles, so, an appropriate experiment would be to use a common gun, like a 9mm or even a .38 Spl, which I know for fact than can be stopped by fat. Even a heavy leather jacket will slow a .38 Spl down enough to lower its damage to a minimum.
- A hollow point bullet, which expands on hitting soft targets, will deaccelerate considerably when traveling through the medium.
- Even when a bullet can be stopped by fat, what is most damaging is not the perfuration made, it's also the effect of the thermostatic shock that damages internal organs.
- AFAIK, only muzzle loading guns use round (as in "round ball") bullets, but then, their speed is very limited, they are made of lead, and their surface is not near as finished as a ball bearing.
I'm with Simon on this one; the amount of fat required to stop a bullet depends on lots of variables that they really didn't cover very well. Interesting premise, but projectile shape, weight, muzzle velocity and distance to target would all play into the equation.
Pretty safe to say that being shot is bad. Being fat is bad too. Avoid both to live a long life.
Comments (4)
I also don't really get the entire thing surrounding the characters... like I've played a few of the games and the story seems o.k. I guess, but to have this entire culture surrounding it? Crazy!
Anyway the CNN thigny got this very very wrong, the computer animation went first, and then different versions were made by other people for fun, like this paper one.
Touhou Project is a shmup game for the computer by the way.. http://touhou.wikia.com/wiki/Touhou_Wiki
(Sorry..for rambling lol. I just hate to see my favorite game series being misunderstood)
Of course, for rifle bullets, feet and feet of fat would be necessary. However, for small arms (pistols and revolvers), the experiment is invalid, because:
- most pistol bullets aren't as heavy as the ball bearing they used. Ball bearings are usually made of steel. Bullets are lead, antimony and, sometimes copper. A steel ball bearing of the same size of a bullet is usually heavier than the bullet.
- The 9mm Luger is a fast cartridge, but doesn't come close to 500 m/s (usually, 350 m/s for a 124 gr bullet)
- Most people are shot by small arms, not rifles, so, an appropriate experiment would be to use a common gun, like a 9mm or even a .38 Spl, which I know for fact than can be stopped by fat. Even a heavy leather jacket will slow a .38 Spl down enough to lower its damage to a minimum.
- A hollow point bullet, which expands on hitting soft targets, will deaccelerate considerably when traveling through the medium.
- Even when a bullet can be stopped by fat, what is most damaging is not the perfuration made, it's also the effect of the thermostatic shock that damages internal organs.
- AFAIK, only muzzle loading guns use round (as in "round ball") bullets, but then, their speed is very limited, they are made of lead, and their surface is not near as finished as a ball bearing.
Pretty safe to say that being shot is bad. Being fat is bad too. Avoid both to live a long life.