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Not Clear to Me

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • D David ONeil

    I'm betting it is a real glass (or plexiglass or something similar), and he really is writing on it, and the footing has been flipped left-to-right.

    Our Forgotten Astronomy | Object Oriented Programming with C++ | Wordle solver

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    Amarnath S
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    Yes. As shown here, [Teaching with a Learning Glass Lightboard - YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-l8MY5kYGc) One more - [Glassboards Improve Online Learning at Rutgers - YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4lxGjwVRCM)

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    • B BernardIE5317

      greetings and kind regards perhaps some here have seen YouTube videos of mathematics whereupon presenter writes on apparent glass pane and is seen apparently behind said pane yet the writing is facing the viewer as shown in link below . how the heck does that work ??? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuiIyYbI0HM[^] thank you kindly

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      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      The glass pane is a "drawing" device ... what he "sees" is shown (on) somewhere else ... A "screen" behind / in front of the glass pane (depending on your perspective). Then a transparent screen that projects back to the audience. And his glass is one-way so he doesn't get thrown off. (Or none of the above).

      "Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I

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      • B BernardIE5317

        greetings and kind regards perhaps some here have seen YouTube videos of mathematics whereupon presenter writes on apparent glass pane and is seen apparently behind said pane yet the writing is facing the viewer as shown in link below . how the heck does that work ??? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuiIyYbI0HM[^] thank you kindly

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        trønderen
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        Note that the guy appears to be writing with his left hand. He may of course be a 'leftie', but it is more likely that he is writing with his right hand, and the image has been mirrored, to get the mirrored text on the glass back to normal.

        Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.

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        • T trønderen

          Note that the guy appears to be writing with his left hand. He may of course be a 'leftie', but it is more likely that he is writing with his right hand, and the image has been mirrored, to get the mirrored text on the glass back to normal.

          Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.

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          jmaida
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          this is a most interesting and educational topic. Thanx. Who would have thought!

          "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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          • J jmaida

            this is a most interesting and educational topic. Thanx. Who would have thought!

            "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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            BernardIE5317
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            Greetings and Kind Regards There are many YouTube videos re/ "Classical/Lagrangian/Hamiltonian/Advanced Mechanics"

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            • J jmaida

              this is a most interesting and educational topic. Thanx. Who would have thought!

              "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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              dandy72
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              jmaida wrote:

              Who would have thought!

              Da Vinci, for one. It's been well documented that he learned to write 'backwards' so as not to stain his sleeves with ink, and then you had to use a mirror to read his notes. Something like that anyway.

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              • D dandy72

                jmaida wrote:

                Who would have thought!

                Da Vinci, for one. It's been well documented that he learned to write 'backwards' so as not to stain his sleeves with ink, and then you had to use a mirror to read his notes. Something like that anyway.

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                jmaida
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                Not so much as writing backwards, Da Vinci was a crazy genius. I was referring to "the writing on glass techniques". Very clever. Still trying to fully understand the camera play.

                "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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                • J jmaida

                  Not so much as writing backwards, Da Vinci was a crazy genius. I was referring to "the writing on glass techniques". Very clever. Still trying to fully understand the camera play.

                  "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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                  trønderen
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  jmaida wrote:

                  Still trying to fully understand the camera play.

                  What is difficult to understand? The guy writes on a transparent surface (glass or plastic - that doesn't matter) with some sort of pen that leaves very solid lines on the glass. Because the camera sees the writing from the back of the glass, it appears mirrored, written from right to left. So the electronic mirror the mirrored image, which is trivial: Just scan the lines in the opposite direction.(*) The text comes out the right way. Also, the guy is mirrored. But as the camera sees him directly through the glass, he is not mirrored, to the camera. So when the processing mirrors both text and man (by scanning lines backwards), he comes out mirrored: His right hand, which writes the text, looks like a left hand. If you want to see the scene the way the camera saw it, watch your screen via a mirror, and you will see that the guy is right handed. (*) Mirroring is so trivial that my first digital video camera, bought in 1997, did it in the camera. I had an underwater house for it, but there was no way to use the ocular viewfinder from outside the house. The camera had a large foldout LCD viewfinder screen, but you couldn't fold it out inside the house, and it would not be easy to see from outside. But you could flip this screen around and fold it back to the camera body, with the image side pointing out, straight to the left. Then the viewfinder image flipped to mirrored. Why? The house had a clear window right in front of the screen. On the outside of the house was a mirror that would fold out 45 degrees. When I looked into that mirror from the back end of the camera, I saw the mirror image of the LCD viewfinder inside the underwater house. Since I viewed it via a mirror, the LCD image had to be mirrored to come out the right way to my eyes. This was done 25+ years ago in an amateur video camera. Doing it with today's electronics is probably even simpler than trivial.

                  Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.

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                  • J jmaida

                    Not so much as writing backwards, Da Vinci was a crazy genius. I was referring to "the writing on glass techniques". Very clever. Still trying to fully understand the camera play.

                    "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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                    dandy72
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    Well, it seems to me like it's the same thing, no? The presenter writes on glass in the "normal" direction, which looks backwards to the camera, and anyone looking at it from the other side - like DaVinci's notes. Then the video is mirrored, just as you'd use a mirror to read DaVinci's notes. I don't think there's anything special about the camera. You just post-process the recorded video. You can do the same with VLC, by using Tools / Effects and Filters / Video Effects / Geometry / Transform / Flip horizontally.

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                    • B BernardIE5317

                      greetings and kind regards perhaps some here have seen YouTube videos of mathematics whereupon presenter writes on apparent glass pane and is seen apparently behind said pane yet the writing is facing the viewer as shown in link below . how the heck does that work ??? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuiIyYbI0HM[^] thank you kindly

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                      jschell
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      An investigation mystery. Presenter is Dr. Peter Dourmashkin. So which hand does he favor? Right hand. Look how he writes on the chalkboard at 3:58 in the following video. 8.01x - Lect 24 - Rolling Motion, Gyroscopes, VERY NON-INTUITIVE - YouTube[^] So with the video from the OP...starting as 0:32 (and 2:05) seconds in he writes on the screen. He is using his left hand. Also if you look at 0:08 he is also gesturing with his left hand. One might claim that he is just ambidextrous but it seems unlikely that he would gesture like that also.

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