![]() 09/11/2016 at 17:24 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
Seriously, what the ever flying fuck? Alien. This man is an alien.
![]() 09/11/2016 at 17:32 |
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I guess if you use dotted lines that much you get really good at drawing them.
![]() 09/11/2016 at 17:35 |
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Well if you hold it at a certain angle it will skip, he obviously has it down. He uses fat chalk too, which is probably important. I use fat chalk on the floor when we do rigging to mark points to put our laser, I will try it.
![]() 09/11/2016 at 17:39 |
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I didn't even realize the dotted line thing until like a minute in. My WTF moment was just how neat everything was written. Never had a professor that wrote that legibly on the board. Plus it's rare to see chalk nowadays so I guess this is dated or MIT still allows it. You could never draw like that though with dry erase, thus guy is a master chalker!
![]() 09/11/2016 at 17:52 |
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....eh?
also, IDK whats funnier. The lines, or the fact that I actually understand what the hell is written up on the board LOL.
![]() 09/11/2016 at 17:56 |
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Yeah but What was on the board?
![]() 09/11/2016 at 17:58 |
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These videos are late 90s or early 2000s. He is long since retired, I still use them as resources though.
I was in that class room a couple years ago for an event and it still had chalkboards.
![]() 09/11/2016 at 18:33 |
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So many free body diagrams...
![]() 09/11/2016 at 18:53 |
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I guess this guy actually drags the chalk in a way that makes it skip, but when I was in my early school years, I distinctly remember a teacher having a wheel with a bunch of smaller bits of chalk around the outside diameter that she held in the center and let roll across the chalkboard to make dotted lines. That’s what I thought he was using when I first saw this video.
![]() 09/11/2016 at 22:35 |
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I bet this guy could do monster thumb-rolls on tambourine.
![]() 09/12/2016 at 16:33 |
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nah its not math. he’s just drawing. I don’t see any multiplication or subtraction or division or addition with numbers. When they started removing numbers is when I stopped calling it mathematics.