Your next gaming dice could be shaped like a dragon or armadillo

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Summary

The algorithm efficiently and robustly computed the probability of all resting configurations (in 3 ms) of the pig model from the popular game Pass the Pigs. Keenan Crane The algorithm efficiently and robustly computed the probability of all resting configurations (in 3 ms) of the pig model from the popular game Pass the Pigs. Keenan Crane Using the algorithm to synthesize a household scene cluttered with toys, showing the most likely resting configuration for each. Keenan Crane Using the algorithm to synthesize a household scene cluttered with toys, showing the most likely resting configuration for each. Keenan Crane Modeling a torus-shaped design similar to ancient knucklebones. Modeling a torus-shaped design similar to ancient knucklebones. Using the algorithm to synthesize a household scene cluttered with toys, showing the most likely resting configuration for each. Keenan Crane Modeling a torus-shaped design similar to ancient knucklebones. So one day soon, gamers might be able to choose from a wide selection of exotically shaped dice for future play—and even 3D print their own designs. (You can already 3D print the team's designs since Baktash posted the STL files.) The new tool might also prove useful for creating natural-looking arrangements of geometry or adjusting a design so that an object is better able to stand upright, akin to the "Daruma doll," a traditional Japanese toy that is hollow and weighted at the bottom so that it always returns to an upright position when tilted over. "Our approach makes it possible to bake this property into the geometry of the shape itself," said Crane. As for more "serious" applications, Crane points to underwater construction, "where the low-momentum assumption is very realistic and it's important for things to land in the proper orientation," he said. "Alternatively, if you imagine each little grain of sand or soil is a rigid particle, the statistics of how they land might help understand things like how soil settles an...

First seen: 2025-05-29 19:07

Last seen: 2025-05-31 10:26