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Vibe Coding Metahuman with ThreeJS: Hairs and Combs It's now possible to draw hair, density and flow masks, place guide curves and comb them! The hair is rendered partially as curves and card meshes to achieve more volume with less strands and there are lots of material/shader settings to...

32,040 views • 2 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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vibe coding metahuman with threejs and codex: spitting FACS ok, i'll admit 3D modeling has a lot of depth, going from a cube to a full facial action coding system is.. a lot of work, but really it isn't all that hard to learn like some people want you to believe it took me about 10 evenings to go from scratch (no idea how to even model in blender beyond the famous donut) to a working rigged and shape keyed expression system the actual vibe coding parts are very manageable, i'm not even hitting any session limits the past week since codex is basically just reading the glb file and it writes the drivers to have a full animation system in a single turn after that i usually notice that some things don't look as professional as i like it to be, followed by codex sending my ass back to blender and telling me what i need to do to make it better so here we are, the expression system is still very very simplified, no micro expressions yet and i believe i will need probably 500+ shape keys to actual achieve realism, but why not? Doing the 52 ARKit expressions for this demo wasn't too hard either, just tedious and boring The final driver in the demo uses a mix of bone movements and blendshapes to smoothly animate the face I might mix up some terminology here but i usually do cause it's been like what, 10 days since i started? Guess next up i'll look into face deformation parameters and then we'll move to the fun part of skinning. Once the head/neck area works (hairs are also still missing), full body next and finally LOD systems and we can call it a day Demo (pls use a desktop i'm not optimizing the ui for mobile):

robot

29,357 views • 2 months ago

🎯 “So I watched that film, though I'd never heard of it before, called Vigilante Citizen, which stars Armie Hammer. Now it's not available on the mainstream media, of course it's not. It's not available on any of the big streaming networks, but it is available on Elon Musk's X. So you can watch the whole film on there. And basically it's about illegal immigration coming to Europe, it's not just one country, and it's fictional, but it's true. And it is so close to the two-tier policing, the DEI attitude of judges and all the other people. The victims are the ones who suffer, and the bloody perpetrators getting away with it. Well not now, there's justice for them from the Vigilante Citizen. And it's apparently upset loads of governments, and therefore they're all winching and bitching about it. So the number of people who are watching it right across the world, and look at it, and listen to it, and that is what is happening. It is terrifying, and it's a very worrying sign. We in the UK have to do something about this. We've got to stop it. We've got to stop the Islamisation of this country. This is still a Christian country, and if you don't like it, then I suggest you fuck off, okay? Just go, because we don't want you here. But they're coming over in their droves. Look at the weather. Crystal Clear, a little bloody channel, and they're being helped across the channel by the R&LI.Don't give them any more money. I used to support them with a donation on a yearly basis. Never again. Don't. fuck them. These illegals come here. They have to take what they get, and I put them into a fucking detention centre, put razor wire around them, and treat them like they did the victims of the Second World War. Treat them with the minimum of humanity, make sure they're clean, and they're fed, and they're watered, and they've got many good facilities. And then quickly assess who they are, where they're from, and what they're doing here. And if they're no good for this country, then fuck them off. Anyway, I don't care where you're sending them. We've got to do something.”

Apple Lamps

48,307 views • 19 days ago

To be a successful founder, you have to believe that what you're working on is going to work — despite knowing it probably won't! That sounds like an oxymoron, but it's really not. Believing that what you're building is going to work is an essential component of coming to work with the energy, fortitude, and determination it's going to require to even have a shot. Knowing it probably won't is accepting the odds of that shot. It's simply the reality that most things in business don't work out. At least not in the long run. Most businesses fail. If not right away, then eventually. Yet the world economy is full of entrepreneurs who try anyway. Not because they don't know the odds, but because they've chosen to believe they're special. The best way to balance these opposing points — the conviction that you'll make it work, the knowledge that it probably won't — is to do all your work in a manner that'll make you proud either way. If it doesn't work, you still made something you wouldn't be ashamed to put your name on. And if it does work, you'll beam with pride from making it on the basis of something solid. The deep regret from trying and failing only truly hits when you look in the mirror and see Dostoevsky staring back at you with this punch to the gut: "Your worst sin is that you have destroyed and betrayed yourself for nothing." Oof. Believe it's going to work. Build it in a way that makes you proud to sign it. Base your worth on a human on something greater than a business outcome.

DHH

96,462 views • 1 year ago