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First somewhat real attempt at Nomad , almost zero prior experience. Suprisingly easy and smooth transition over from #Zbrush , everything makes sense, things are where they should be, very intuitive. Love the long forgotten feeling of not fighting with software. This is Procreate of 3D sculpting.

181,106 görüntüleme • 3 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

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🙏🇺🇸🙏 He should be 30 today. Living life. Building a future. Creating memories that grow with time. But for Hugh Conor McDowell, time stopped at 24. That is the part that never feels real. The years keep moving forward... but he does not. A Marine officer in the United States Marine Corps, he chose a path that demanded everything. Leadership. Responsibility. The weight of decisions that affect others. Marines do not just follow orders. They carry expectations. They lead from the front. And he was one of them. At 24, most are just starting to understand life. But he had already stepped into something greater. Serving. Leading. Standing where few are willing to stand. The kind of role that requires strength, not just physically, but mentally. The kind that asks for sacrifice without warning. And then... Everything stopped. A life full of potential. Frozen in a single moment. The future that should have unfolded... never got the chance. No 25. No 26. No 30. Just memories. Just a name etched where heroes are remembered. At Arlington National Cemetery, he rests among others who gave everything. A place where stories end too early, but are never forgotten. Where sacrifice is not just remembered, it is honored. "Eternally 24." Those words carry weight. Because they remind us of something we often overlook. Time is not guaranteed. And for some... It stops long before it should. Hugh Conor McDowell did not get to grow older. But he lived with purpose. And that purpose... Still echoes long after he is gone 🙏🇺🇸🙏

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37,081 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce

People do this kind of thing when they feel they are experiencing reality at a high frame rate. It does not feel risky to hold a laptop by a corner if you feel like you have an “agency frame” every half second. It feels risky if you have an “agency frame” every 60 seconds. You’d be betting that a hand you do not have control over for 60 seconds will keep gripping. Our conscious frame rate can vary dramatically throughout the day, and it’s hard to perceive the difference because we can only sample ourselves at our conscious frame rate, we can’t oversample ourselves. People drunk drive because they fail to perceive their slower frame rate. Their frame rate feels normal because it matches their sample rate. But we do get a subtle sense of when we’re “switched on”. Everything seems to go easier, everything feels less risky and more easy to correct. A lot of people toward the autistic side of the spectrum are experiencing reality very granularly with a “high agency frame rate”. This is why their social interactions can seem overly forced and awkward, they can be bad at dancing, etc—because they are exerting conscious control over their body and language at very tight intervals—you get a sense that they are extremely “self aware” and not “letting go”. “Letting go” in the social sense is actually about reducing your agency frame rate. That’s why alcohol is good for socializing and bad for driving. With a reduced agency frame rate our speech and body language feels more natural, less forced. More like we are flowing with the social group mind rather than being an island of constant awkward agency.

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