Benvenuti nel nuovo portale di SognoPsicologia.org!
Questo non ? proprio inutile come gli altri :p http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5nmspVOz_Y..voglio sapere cosa dicono! :ahah:
...ooohhh...rileggendo del video di dragostea mi ? venuto in mente quello fantastico...dov'??...http://www.sognopsicologia.org/vforum/showthread.php?t=476non c'? pi? :cry: e non la trovo da nessuna parte, cavoli... :dry:
Troppo bello sto video ho passato i miei ultimi 10 minuti come un bambino, grazie Rebe non mi capitava da tanto! I giapponesi sono pazzi!
qualcuno nei commenti suggerisce: "pitagora switch"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1RT8Iz8Og4 questo tipo sembra jerry cal? ai tempi d'oro...va beh...basta...magari non era manco questo che intendevi...
Pitagola suicci! Bellissimiii, ho letto che ? un programma per bambini in Giappone e nel programma fanno vedere tutti questi video di marchingegni, per? ? diventata proprio una moda, sta impazzando proprio:DA quanto pare ? lui l'inventore! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rube_Goldberg
A Rube Goldberg machine or device is any exceedingly complex apparatus that performs a very simple task in a very indirect and convoluted way. Rube devised such pataphysical devices. The best examples of his machines have an anticipation factor: the fact that something so wacky is happening can only be topped by it happening in a suspenseful manner. A Rube Goldberg machine usually has at least ten steps. One story about Rube Goldberg holds that, while sleep-walking barefoot in a cactus field, he screamed out an idea about a self-operating napkin.
In Japan, They are also referred to as ピタゴラ装置 (Pitagora Souchi), meaning 'Pythagorean Apparatuses'. They appear on the TV program ピタゴラスイッチ (Pitagora Suicchi).A children's educational television show named ピタゴラスイッチ ("Pitagora Suicchi", or "Pythagorean Switch") features Rube Goldberg machines at the beginning and end of each episode, and at transition points within episodes. The show has been produced by NHK-ETV since 2002. Those machines are created by 佐藤雅彦 Lab in Keio university
Machines in the mediaIn Nick Park's "Wallace and Gromit" series of shorts and features, Wallace's inventions are clearly Rube Goldberg-esque. A recurring joke throughout A Grand Day Out, The Wrong Trousers, A Close Shave and Curse of the Were-Rabbit are the absurd contraptions that Wallace invents. Good examples are Wallace's "Knit-O-Matic machine" or the device that catapults a dollop of jam onto a piece of toast as it springs out of a pop-up toaster. However, it is more likely to be compared to the works of Heath Robinson, as Rube Goldberg is comparatively little known in the UK.The films Am?lie and A Very Long Engagement expand this theme further, moving from the physiological to the metaphysical. As noted by Philadelphia City Paper's Sam Wood, fate itself operates as a Rube Goldberg device, "an endless chain of tricky coincidences whose final result is utterly beyond prediction."In the film Final Destination, as well as its sequels Final Destination 2 and Final Destination 3, the way "death" tracks down and kills its victims resemble deadly Rube Goldberg machines.The 4400 television series makes use of a "ripple effect" Rube Goldberg plot element.In the cartoon series Family Guy, Peter Griffin uses a Rube Goldberg machine (one almost exactly like the breakfast machine in Pee Wee's Big Adventure), that comically shoots Peter with a gun rather than make breakfast; followed by a complaint from Peter that "What was the point of all that? All it does is shoot you, it doesn't make breakfast at all!".Rube Goldberg machines are often used by Tom in Tom and Jerry.The Looney Tunes short "Hook, Line, and Stinker" ended with the Wile E. Coyote character attempting to use a Rube Goldberg machine to capture the Road Runner. Many other Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts employ such devices.The 1990 movie Back to the Future Part III features a Wild West version of a Rube Goldberg device. One of the main characters, Dr Emmett "Doc" Brown (Christopher Lloyd), is transported back in time to the year 1885, where he works as a blacksmith. When "rescued" by Marty McFly (Michael J Fox), he is working on an enormous steam-powered machine. The machine is easily 3 to 4 metres tall, with no immediate clue as to its function. When put into action, it shakes and groans and emits whistles and steam sounds (think of a loud steam engine) for about 20 seconds. When it falls silent, it produces two small irregularly-shaped bits of ice; it's an icemaker. Another such machine in the same movie is the Wakeup/ Breakfast Cooking Machine, which at the right time prepares toast and eggs for the Doc. There is another scene in the first film where there is another Rube Goldberg machine that Doc uses to feed his dog Einstein.The 1990 film Home Alone and its three sequels find the main character often employing the use of Goldberg-esque devices to trap and/or slow down the progress of burglars attempting to ransack his home.Another 1985 film, The Goonies, also prominently featured several Rube Goldberg devices, both as performing practical applications (opening the front gate to let someone inside), and springing traps. The 2005 film Waiting... also featured a Rube Goldberg device as part of the set for the restaurant. It was shown in action after the credits of the film and was used to fill a glass from a glass bottle.In the 1968 film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Professor Caractacus Potts uses a Rube Goldberg device to make breakfast for his family. This device is similar to the device shown later in Pee-wee's Big Adventure and in Big Fish.In the 7th season X-Files episode "The Goldberg Variation" Mulder and Scully meet a man who has a great amount of good luck that manifests as a sort of Rube Goldberg device, with improbable events combining to effect a certain outcome.In a short segment in an episode of Animaniacs, titled "Wakko's Gizmo", Wakko creates and sets off an elaborate Rube Goldberg machine in order to flatten a whoopie cushion.The satirical Mad Magazine features a comic strip entitled, "Spy vs. Spy", in which Cold War spies from opposing countries take turns trying to eliminate each other with improbably-designed traps.
Machines in videogamesIn Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge's acid pit scene, LeChuck tied Guybrush Threepwood and Wally B. Feed in a Rube Goldberg style trap.
Other referencesThe Ideal Toy Company released a board game called Mouse Trap in 1963 that was based on Rube Goldberg's ideas (this game is currently made by Hasbro).
In the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, the tinker gnomes of the Dragonlance setting are well-known for their propensity to create goldbergesque machines and tools.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00L0Fm9UwpA&mode=related&search=
se per caso qualcuno l'anno scorso, se lo fosse perso...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5tQOY1ziqrc