The AI-generated cat pictures thread
Random compilation of motorcycle tricks, drifts, rolling burnouts, track footage, and such stuff.
Definitely well done vid.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=679020278806005
Definitely well done vid.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=679020278806005
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,026
Total Cats: 6,592
You ain't kidding.
This past Sunday morning, we ran a go-live test of our new aux transmitter in West Orange, meaning that a bunch of us had to stay up until 4am watching TV at our homes, to analyze the signal and compare it to that from the main location (eg: we're making a map which shows where the new signal is better than the old one, where it's worse, where we think we can improve it, etc.)
Watching my own TV station from 1:30am - 4am gave me a whole new reason to loathe our programming. Ever seen the sitcom "Mr. Box Office?" Don't. I'd rather have to watch Sex in the City.
Also, now that you've seen the equipment I was shooting with, hopefully you can understand why the video looks so bad. Yes, that is a VHS machine.
This past Sunday morning, we ran a go-live test of our new aux transmitter in West Orange, meaning that a bunch of us had to stay up until 4am watching TV at our homes, to analyze the signal and compare it to that from the main location (eg: we're making a map which shows where the new signal is better than the old one, where it's worse, where we think we can improve it, etc.)
Watching my own TV station from 1:30am - 4am gave me a whole new reason to loathe our programming. Ever seen the sitcom "Mr. Box Office?" Don't. I'd rather have to watch Sex in the City.
Also, now that you've seen the equipment I was shooting with, hopefully you can understand why the video looks so bad. Yes, that is a VHS machine.
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,026
Total Cats: 6,592
One of my employees and I are deep into the planning of a complex and elaborate practical joke involving an office chair, a TV set, a camera, some rope, and a $60,000 industrial robot.