No I'm effing well not and this is the third time in 30 mins that I've told you! GGgggrrrr
No I'm effing well not and this is the third time in 30 mins that I've told you! GGgggrrrr
Is that the same sort of principle with some Christmas lights, e.g, the ones with lights that seem to travel along the length of the wire, yet they are only flashing?
I am not sure, it gets quite mixed up between perception and psychology (like expectations etc.), so it's hard to distinguish for me.
The amount of times I’ve tried to get a sleep record on YouTube and I can’t because the phone or websites think I’m a robot! It’s so annoying, it’s worse when you have to sign into YouTube and I don’t have an account and it’s not worth creating one just for a song. I might go back to the old fashioned cd player and a cd
I couldn't either, needed the contrast button.
oh that's weird!
Good one.
Regretfully I suspect the AI algorithm for the robot would be pretty easy to teach gamut of visual illusions to watch out for!
I can't not see them as steps.
I tried to see them moving smoothly, but even knowing they are, I can't see it unless I turn the contrast down.
Like you, when I switched focus from the middle, the feet changed from a smooth movement to tiny steps.
Is that the same sort of principle with some Christmas lights, e.g, the ones with lights that seem to travel along the length of the wire, yet they are only flashing?
I didn't know that, not a band I listen too.
It was a line from 'Half Man - Half Machine' by Goldie Lookin' Chain!
I don't even try and understand AI and all the rest of this tech stuff, it's just magic, of a not very beneficial kind
Yes, same for me (fixing my attention into the background, in a way).
My tangentially related argument was that AIs may not be able to see the illusion, even if they want to, so it could be used to block some bots.
When I looked between the feet they both seemed to move smoothly at the same time, it was only when looking at one or the other that they seemed to moving like foot steps
Oh, sorry about it. It's because it has an extra comma at the end, here is the correct link:
https://michaelbach.de/ot/mot-feetLin/index.html
It's hard to explain without seeing it, since it's a visual illusion of movement.
The best I could say is: when two objects walk on a high contrast zebra crossing synchronously, it looks like they move in turns.
I tried that link and got an error code and it said it wasn't found.
What is the thing you thought would be good?
They are indeed, I'm quite grateful of people making such websites. Reminds me of https://www.reddit.com/r/InternetIsBeautiful/, which is a subreddit for lists of wonderful websites.
I'm glad you found it interesting.
Those things are mad! It's cool to be able to turn down the contrast and see the trick!
Tangentially related: I wonder whether pages could use visual illusions for captchas.
For example https://michaelbach.de/ot/mot-feetLin/index.html where the robot --I think-- would fail to see the illusion.
Though, I guess there isn't any advantage or the would be used frequently.
I wonder if all humans would see it.
A drink, I'd like a bottle! But I don't drink any more.
I prefer to roll my own!
I didn't understand half of this thread, people are talking in code.
Still I think I'd rather tick a box than have to see how many wardrobes or monkeys are in half a dozen pictures
Computer says Noooooooooooo!
*Coughs in your face*