字幕表 動画を再生する
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Hey, Vsauce. Michael here with some things you can do
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online now, guys. Let's start the DONGs off in the right hands
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with misternicehands.com. You can pull his finger.
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Wordle.net
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analyzes text, like on a web site, and generates a free
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word cloud with fun sizes correlating to the frequency with which the words
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are used. Pretty awesome, right? But is it the most
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awesomest thing ever dot com ?
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The site pits two things against each other and lets you vote on which of the
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two things
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is awesome. For instance, pilgrims versus Andrew Jackson.
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I'm gonna have to go with pilgrims. But periodic table
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or Orson Welles? Which is awesomer? Okay, it's tough, but I'm gonna have to go with
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Mendeleev.
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Now, the site tabulates everyone's answers and runs a list
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of what people currently consider to be the most awesome.
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Notice that right now, life is being beat
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by the Internet. Got a song stuck in your head?
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Go to unhearit.com, a site dedicated to playing
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equally catchy songs, with the hope of removing the one
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that's stuck in your head. And if you like what you hear, check out
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TuneGlue. Type in a band to add them to the field and then expand them
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to see other bands related. Now, I also like Music-Map,
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where you can enter a musician's name and other bands orbit them at distances
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related to how similar their styles are.
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If you're tired of music recognition programs that don't allow you to sing
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your own song or
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hum, enter midomi.com. It's still not perfect,
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but I am terrible and Midomi still
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understood what I was trying to do. "I won't loose a baby,
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so why don't you kill me?" Amazing.
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Another flawless performance by Michael Stevens.
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ThunderShark78 introduced me to Fracuum,
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a series of mazes you continually shrink down
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into. The perspective is pretty cool.
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Now let's get mathematical with Conway's
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Game of Life. This one's a doozy, but it's really famous. Right now I'm playing
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it as a downloadable version for PC, Mac or Linux,
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known as "Golly." So, the game itself
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is simply a grid that I can fill in and whether a cell
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is alive or dead determines what the next
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generation will look like. What made this game so famous
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is that using just a few deterministic rules, we're able to create some quite
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complex
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things. Now classically, the rules are very
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simple. The fate of a cell depends on the status of its 1,
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2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 neighbors.
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If two or three cells surround it,
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it's gonna be fine, it's going to continue to live. But if fewer than two,
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or if more than three exist around it, it will die of isolation or
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overcrowding. Now, likewise, if
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a dead empty cell has 3, exactly three neighbors,
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it will come to life. So the next generation of this shape
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looks like this. It's amazing how just a few
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simple deterministic rules can allow you to create
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shapes like this one, known as a glider, which
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across successive generations actually locomotes.
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Oh, and GMSlash showed me a version where the cells
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are mushrooms, and the longer a cell lives, the bigger the mushroom gets.
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But what's a game of life without love?
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Themediabuffs sent me pretentious game, a wonderful interactive poem that's
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touching, but aware of itself. And Connor showed me an even more tragic love,
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a game where you play a guy in love
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with a zombie. Get her to follow you,
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but keep her in a cage. Also cute is Night
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of the Loving Dead. You play a skeleton who must find his body parts to reunite
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with his true love. As you acquire organs, like your brain,
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you can begin to use new powers. Now, if you're not
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in love with a zombie and would prefer to prepare for their attack,
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TheArzonite offers you Map of the Dead,
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a global Google Map delineating areas where zombie activity will likely be
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highest
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in the event of an outbreak. It includes helpful landmarks, like nearby food and
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ammunition shops,
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so you can plan your strategy now. If this is all a bit too scary for you,
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relax with N3xTB0y's
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z0r.de, a collection of quick looping images
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and silly music. Shantuku discovered this neat interactive scale of the universe tool.
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We've covered things like this before, but you can never have enough.
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While we're out in space, let's get bigger plane cosmic crush,
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like Amonfobious'. Collide with smaller items to grow larger and avoid
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giant dangerous celestial objects.
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Here on YouTube, Vixolent uploaded a really well-made interactive
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game. You play within a single video and his use of annotations is quite
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ingenious. And TheRealMcJoni made this impressive interactive
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domino video. The tricks and layout are really neat
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and you get to choose a direction at the end of the video - let's hope it's the
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right one.
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Back to Metronomy. Subscribe to Vsauce for more.
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And as always,
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thanks for watching.