@ClarusPlusPlus git ...that right on my Steam Deck, wench!! 😏💕
Explore the cyberpunk-themed Fediverse instances corteximplant.com and corteximplant.net.
CORTEX IMPLANT is a Mastodon and Akkoma instance for all cyberpunks and edgerunners who survived the big DataKrash and want to stay independent and hide from NetWatch.
Never heard of the Fediverse, let alone Mastodon or Akkoma? Let's break it down real quick. Imagine a social network not run by corporations but with cool emotes. Picture a social media platform that doesn't sell your data or misuse it in any shady way. Isn't that the essence of cyberpunk—finally being independent?
Link your cyberware and connect with creative LGBTQIA+ friendly netrunners, solos, fixers, nomads, techies, medias, corpos and rockers from all over the world behind a heavy ICE.
Founded in 2022 by Revengeday, a techno musician from Berlin, CORTEX IMPLANT was created to connect Cyberpunks, Edgerunners, and like-minded souls from around the globe.
It took off so well that CORTEX IMPLANT is now one of the largest cyberpunk-themed instances on the Fediverse.
@ClarusPlusPlus git ...that right on my Steam Deck, wench!! 😏💕
@sibilant @scy that exactly. For “film” effect you have the shutter open for half a frame, then closed for half a frame, that’s why you get motion blur in the first place. If you block the view of an object for additional time the blocking object keeps its blur and the occluded one looses it. Because of that 180 degree shutter effect you get the blur strobing on panning motion. Sometimes it’s used as a creative effect to reduce the shutter to 1/4th or even 1/8th of a frame. Famous example: the beginning scenes of the soldier james ryan on the beach attack scenes. You would not see all the rubble thrown up by the explosions if they would have used a standard shutter length.
Thats also why video recordings with digital cameras in phones look so different. Mostly they reduce the shutter open time to compensate for too much light so you’re better off shooting 60 fps and up on those cameras and then (if you want the filmic look) reduce the fps in a video editor afterwards to get the motion blur back (it’s a crutch but looks more filmic than just recording with basically no motion blur). /infodump-end
@maddy My favorite of the three. :)
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