A Rubrik's cube that always finishes itself? That's amazing! I showed it to my wife and she said she relates, I don't know what she means but she seemed to enjoy the video.
Love the way he shoved all those servos together in that small area, I'll want to see what type of servos\components did he used and what modification he did to them... That is an example of great engineering...
You can see all the tiny circuit boards that are usually in the bottom of the servo sitting on the outside of the sphere. So it looks like the servos are completely dismantled in there. Probably all crammed into a single 3D printed housing.
We all look at people like when they touch our cubes. Its like "my rifle there are lot like it but this one is mine." I put a lot of work into making my cube feel perfect.
Actually, it doesn't seem all that difficult to have put it in there. Like, as long as you knew where to get small enough microchips and how to wire it together, the inside of a cube is actually pretty homey.
@@Rafale25 I didn't say that it isn't really cool, I just wanted to say that it doesn't surprise me it can be done. Although, I didn't really make that very clear. Sorry.
I thought of this in the bathroom and as I congratulated myself for big brain I realized, 'surely I'm not the first to think of this' and behold. This guy has me beat by years. This is why its so hard to truly invent anything. By the time you think of it, a hundred other people already did.
@@charleslindberg829 you cant tell someone that somethings wrong with them, you're kinda a hypocrite because you told someone to kill themself and thats not right either.
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I'm also impressed that you can just turn it and mess with it, and it doesn't break the servos or anything. Looks like it needs more power and more precisely machined parts, he had to keep unjamming it with little nudges, but damn, how many people have a hope in hell of building something like that?
A simple test for this (that I think would prove kind of cool) would be to do a trick called the checkerboard pattern. On a solved cube it takes three moves to creat, and a simple reverse of those three steps to undo back to solved. It would be cool to see the cube solve it's self from checkerboard running the algorithm.
sure world, take that away from me too. why don't you make a robot that can eat and sleep too world? will that satisfy you world? I can do three fucking things world, why are you taking this away from me world? ANSWER ME WORLD!!! FUCK YOU WORLD, YOU AREN'T BETTE THEN ME!!!!
Yeah, but looking it up is cheating. I can solve one now in about 30-60 minutes, but it took me about 9 months to learn. Why? Because I actually figured it out myself, rather than looking up a 'solution'. I mean, solving it is still amusing, but figuring out HOW to solve it is the most interesting part. So looking up the answer defeats the purpose.
It's like a nerdier version of a useless machine. Although some useless machines are pretty complex, so at least externally the cube wears it's nerdy colors.
@@belowaveragereadings9107 i just broke the cubes apart and put them back together in the right colors, they're typically held together with clip like parts. and removing the stickers will wrinkle them a lot ):
@@AsbestosMuffins a useless machine isn't just a machine that does nothing, it's a jokey name for a machine that turns itself off when you turn it on or something similar. since the cube solves itself when you scramble it, it's similar to a useless machine