Learn how to model the Pink Ribbon and show your support.
Learn how to model the Pink Ribbon and show your support.
my first ribbon origami models TUTORIAL (3 parts) www.youtube.com music: evermore- light surrounding you (cut up bits)
Take your AutoCAD? and 3D drawing skills to the next level! Like all advanced technology, AutoCAD? has been constantly evolving. To remain competitive, interior designers must understand and take advantage of the new tools and functionalities of the latest releases. Now you can with CAD for Interiors: Beyond the Basics, an ideal next step from Fiorello's CAD for Interiors: Basics. Fiorello's user-friendly, hands-on approach makes learning exciting and effective by: familiarizing you with the new 2D Drafting and Annotation Workspace and the 3D Modeling Workspace, which are key to accessing many AutoCAD? functions. walking you step by step through the process of drawing detailed building floor plans, sections, and elevations. introducing you to advanced 2D and basic 3D commands. covering presentation and advanced plotting features for sharing AutoCAD? files efficiently. providing practice exercises and videos of detailed AutoCAD? commands...
HDTV Expert - Product Review: A Tale of Two (3D) Televisions
The great 3D TV debates continue as 2011 winds down. “Active 3D is best!” cries one group. “No, passive 3D is better!” replies another. “Don’t jump in yet, wait for autostereo TVs!” warns yet another group.
Here are the facts. At present, there are a handful of manufacturers of active 3D TVs, including market leaders Samsung, Panasonic, and Sony. On the other side of the street, we have passive 3D TVs available from LG, Toshiba, and Vizio.
There are other companies playing in the 3D space to a lesser degree, including Sharp (active 3D) and JVC (passive 3D). And Toshiba is trying to be all things to all people, supporting a few active models and also announcing that they will bring a 55-inch autostereo TV to the Japanese market this fall.
All of this back-and-forth volleying is accomplishing one thing, if nothing else: It’s confusing the heck out of potential buyers. No one wants to sink a few thousand dollars into a 3D TV system and realize belatedly that they picked the wrong horse in the race.