So he says he started with a 3d scan of skeleton, which is good. But then he says he sculpted it, and that's where the question is - seems like a lot of guesswork involved in making up flesh to fit that skeleton.
Yeah I don't see how this guy applied any science here which would suggest that these be more accurate than the original movie. It's just a sculptor putting different tissue over the same skeleton. Also not horrifying at all.
They buy up every YouTuber who has any amount of followers. It's a predatory app designed to squeeze people with addictive personalities out of all their their money. So it makes sense that they spray their shit everywhere. For every 10k they spend on advertising, they only need to hook 2 or 3 whales in order to make back their money.
Watching that happen in the Diablo game was eye opening. I grinded for hours because I enjoyed the game, then joined the top clan, we controlled our server. Then I was kicked out because my gear wasn't expensive enough. I had the hours and game knowledge, but wasn't spending $200-$2,000 a month to keep up.
I had no idea people actually dropped that kind of money on Mobile games until then. I thought those were rare, but no, 90+ people were trying to shame me into spending with them. That was on one server.
I choose to believe the ones in JP are accurate for their frame of reference. Since they were spliced with frog DNA they wouldn’t have turned out exactly how we expect them now.
He talks about it and says the T-Rex was too big. So, if the T-Rex had feathers she would probably overheat and thus he/science/whomever thinks they didn't have feathers.
Don't know if this holds up to current scientific research, but that is what the video says.
There's some evidence even large tyrannosauroids had feathers — hypotheses range from partial feathering to feathers that would be shed during the maturation process.
Everyone's a critic. I have something for you: A painter sat at the river one time, and a little bit distressed. A shoemaker came by, and he asked the painter, "What is wrong?".
The painter answered, "I can't for the life of me figure out how to paint the threads of these sandals!", to which the shoemaker replied, "I am a shoemaker, I can tell you, that the frazzles do not go that way, they go like so!", and showed the stunned painter.
"That's just it! Thank you, kind shoemaker!"
"My pleasure. Now, you might also want to change that cloud, it seems a bit off color..."
Even in '93 they used gene editing to stop reproduction (which failed) and the combination with DNA of modern animals to fill in the gaps as an excuse for them not being perfect copies of real dinosaurs.
And then there's the line in JP3: "What John Hammond and InGen did at Jurassic Park is create genetically engineered theme park monsters. Nothing more, and nothing less."