/I was about to place a note, we have a saying in my country. " hasta al mejor mono se le cae el zapote" . Its something along the lines of " even the best monkey some times let a fruit fall". Great video, even with that minor detail.
@@HelloKittyFanMan. "How many times am I gonna tell you guys the 'air' in lays bags is nitrogen gas that's keeping the chips crispy and fresh!!" type beat 🤓🤡
@@veryconfused9768 It reminded me of that one scene from interstellar. And it was also giving me doctor strange vibes, but it looked more like interstellar
@@narensundar3373 why kick when u can push??, yea try kicking glass, hope it doesn't break Ps if there is no indicator or any door handle u won't know which one it is so if u kick the wrong one, Gold bless your legs, I prefer Push, Not too hard not too soft
I love the way you think. I was counting reflections to see te efficiency of your mirrors right from the get go. I had a friend (now passed) who built rooms like this, except that the walls were trapezoidal, so the room was a truncated pyramid. The effect was that rather than being in a rectilinear lattice, you were part of a segmented sphere with a spherical container. Really trippy.
Imagine standing in there and u r just fascinated by how everything moves at the same time. Then u see one of ur images in the distance just staring at u.
I just caught this video this morning. Truly outstanding. We're you using standard mirrors? I suspect so. If this experiment were repeated with first surface mirrors the effect would have greatly enhanced. Really enjoy the uploads, keep up the good work!
Too bad this couldn't have been done with first surface mirrors. There is no green haze when first surface mirrors a used. I pull them out of old rear projection TVs. Still too small for a room this size though.
When I was younger I used to imagine what it would look like if I was in a cube full of mirrors or even a sphere full off mirrors... This is so cool for all the kids now who might wonder the same! 😁
It would have been amazing if your wife secretly built a second one and put it against the door so that once you finally got out of there you just stepped into a second identical room of mirrors.
There was an art installation at the national gallery of art in the late 80's. It was an entire room of mirrors and you had to wear booties to walk around in it. Pretty cool, I'll never forget that experience.
This is so cool, I really like this, “entire room of,” series you’ve got going on. This room must feel so surreal. I can only imagine what it would be like on psychedelics!
Imagine he just starts walking through the walls, and he realizes, the reflections have become reality, and he is stuck in a endless void full of clones copying him
As someone with a severe fear of heights and severe casadastraphobia (fear of falling into the sky) this would be hell for me. But I'd love to experience this
Out of all the many fears and aversions I have, I can confidently say that casadastraphobia isn't one of them! I hadn't heard of it before and it's good to learn something new. That's a brilliant thing about videos like this. It inspires further ideas and gets people talking to strangers on the other side of the world, even people who are normally very shy and socially awkward. It increases learning and awakens an urge to communicate.
This is actually a ton easier than all the normal light scattering going on, which is why it took so long to go from fake looking shiny CG to modern realistic lighting.
You wouldn't actually have to do that. You could just move in front of a mirror and if the smudge is there then thats the mirror with the smudge. Reflections cant reflect a composite image with true fidelity though an object so when you are between a mirror with a flaw and a mirror recieving that reflection your image will interfere with the reflection of that flaw. Therefore if you can see the flaw, its the mirror directly in front of you.
That would be so disorienting just to assemble it. I would have gotten dizzy/vertigo and gotten sick. I've made several infinity mirrors but this is on another level. Very cool.
Very impressive simulation. You would expect running so many instances to cause slight stuttering. Maybe if thousands of us made mirror rooms and stepped into them simultaneously we could overload the system.
The diminution of photic energy baked into every reflective surface limits the number of bounces to a finite sum. The recursion of similar information in each iteration means you only calculate the full render once and repeat the output with a small spacial transform x number of times where x = the point at which all light energy has been absorbed. We can do this on cheap GPUs already. No big deal for the universe or simulation if you're into that sort of thing.
I thought so too, but then I remembered this creepy mirror effect. Basically when you stare at yourself in a dimly lit mirror for long enough, you'll start to dissociate with the reflected image of yourself. Some people see a distorted version of themselves, but other see an unrecognizable creature. SciShow did an episode on it. Might make it a little uncomfortable in there lol
Can you fill up a room with perfect mirrors? I read that there are some complex dielectric mirrors that reflect 99.999% of light, so you might be able to see further
"The trouble with having a light in a room like this is that it always shines in your eyes" *straight afterwards*: "Now let's see what happens when I turn on my laser" -.-
A laser is actually a narrow beam of light, much easier to control and avoid hitting yourself in the eye because the beam is a cylinder rather than a cone that inevitably refracts at every angle after being mirrored a few times.
@@holdupnowyall it doesnt matter. All it takes is one mistake, and I know his laser wasnt the most powerful, its still dangerous and could cause damage. People wear safety goggles shining a laser at a wall for goodness sake, even if they know 100% there is nothing to reflect it back to them into their eyes (not speaking about lasers powerful enough, where the spot on the wall is still dangerous) , always take safety precautions when the risk is damaging your eyes
@@shernader or live your own life and make your own choices. Any one with the resources to replicate this experiment is very likely an adult and knows by this point the risks involved with not wearing protection. I think its silly to come to video and complain about something that can't be changed.
Definitely one of the best things I’ve seen on the Internet. Back in the 60’s, someone designed an installation that was a large box with mirrors all around like this. Then small lights were placed all over the mirrors. Finally, a box within the box was built of one-way mirrors with the reflecting side facing the outer mirrors so those in the box could see the reflections of the lights all around. I always wondered what it looked like. Now I have some idea.
Sounds like Yayoi Kusama’s art installation (infinity mirror room). But this is essentially something I’ve dreamed of building for years, now. I want to create that otherworldly outer space feel, with infinite glittering stars all around.
Imagine if he was just trapped in there and he decided to break one of the mirrors but it only made weird triangle shapes That made it even more distorted... Boy oh boy.
@hognoxious and then this kung fu guy warmly welcomes you to the 4th spacial dimensions, where you cannot live, since youll be a living paradox of the universe
Idea: larger room made with edgeless mirriors, and you get someone else to close the door completely for you, the only light source is either on your body or held.