I think this is in the category of excess application of technology
I don't know - I got an automatic garbage can that not only opens and closes, it also ejects the garbage bag when it is full and vacuums in another one into place.<p>today's luxury is tomorrow's necessity.<p>things get normalized. pop-up ads, selfies, subscriptions, the cybertruck...
I saw this on Facebook before I saw it here. While it bears a superficial resemblance to 1000s of clickbaity tech stunts this one really delighted me. Some of these should be edited into a remastered release of Blade Runner.
IMO it's worth watching the video rather than reading someone's writeup of it. My favorite part is this (written) list of everything that went wrong [1] ... and how much of it is due to the intersection of hardware, software, vendors, and linux<p>[1] <a href="https://youtu.be/EYRrUiM_A6g?si=T60tAChuo-GNtfqW&t=921" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/EYRrUiM_A6g?si=T60tAChuo-GNtfqW&t=921</a>
The kid would appear to have a future job opportunity at Cyberdyne Systems.
And drenches them in sound
That's really cool honestly. This took me back to around 2017 when <i>everyone</i> was into hardware startups.
Good for a haircut too.
>what was supposedly a small project ended up big and complicated<p>Welcome to the drone world! So many moving parts and one tiny mistake, you end up losing a $60k drone in the ocean (true story!)<p>That being said, regulations prevent flying drones of any size above people, unless the drone is high to certain altitude, because of all the dangers that bring, a small issues and the props will harm them.<p>Cool project tho!