Domino Day '02 Ends with a New World Record
Bobson writes "It took 89 people 8 weeks to set up 4000000(4e6) domino pieces for an attempted World Record. The last piece was set at 21:00 CET(Central European Time) by a Backstreet Boy. Jim somebody... Anyhow said piece started of over 90 minutes of an amazing domino avalanche show. It is one of the top hacking feats I've had the privilege to witness. This time Live on TV. I hope tapes (dvds) of it become available.
They even had time delays of more than 5min each, built into the system to allow for advertising intermissions. Some parts of the installation didn't quite work, but overall it was worth seeing. The final tally came to 3847295 pieces fallen. It ended less than an hour ago and you should have seen it."
Interesting if you want to watch their content you need to pay via DigiPay... 4million domino's aren't really interesting enough to pay to watch.
I'd hate to be the one tasked with counting all the fallen dominoes...
;)
Does anyone have the rundown on how many people and how many weeks that took?
Honey, I shrunk the Cygwin
considering how the careers of the manufactured bands are going downhill, maybe it was fitting that a backstreet boy placed the final piece.
wish they had placed some of the artists and knocked them down too. that would have been more fun.
I remember one time on America's Funniest Home Videos (back in the day, of course, when it was hosted by the King of Cool, Bob Saget) they had this one where two guys spent all night at a video store stacking up empty boxes. They covered the floor, counters, and racks with those semi-transluscent VHS boxes and knocked 'em all down with one super huge domino effect.
The bummer part was when some dude who got whacked in the crotch won the grand prize for the show.
http://www.walkingtaco.com
Pendulums, at least the last delay (I only watched the last part, it's kind of boring...)
The pendulum just circles around, in smaller circles until it hits a domino, et voila!
Looks like there are more questions than answers in the post (as usual):
What: (we got this)
Who: Domino expert Robin Weijers and his crew (hundreds of sturdents and volunteers)
When: yesterday
Where: Leewarden, the Netherlands (not Germany)
Why: To beat the Japanese, of course!
The Dutch and the Japanese routiely dance around this world record. I've been around for 3 of these so far and within 6 months a Japanese expert (also with students and volunteers).
The only difference: They have domino robots. We have windmills. Well, usually - I actually went out last night so I missed it...
...and HOW much counting to get to 4 million?
A friend of mine was involved in this back in the '80s. They don't really count the dominos. They weigh them. Given a certain tolerance in the weight, you can calculate the uncertainty in the number of stones. The exact number is not all that important, it's more that you can establish that you beat the previous record.
MSN 8: Now Microsoft even has bugs in their ad campaigns.
Like a few people already said: this is beginning to be a recurring event on Dutch television.
;-)
It's organized and televised by SBS6, a Dutch network, so I don't know what the links to RTL (a German network) is all about... The link to the program is here
They did come up with a few nice new things though... I aspecially liked when they had domino's falling under water, and at one point they even had a bubble of air rising to the surface, knocking down domino's as it went...
I'm curious to see what they come up with next year...
PageTurner Reader: open-source e-reader for Android with cloudsync. http://pageturner-reader.org
4000000 dominos: $400000
Travel expenses for 89 people to Germany: $60000
28480 minimum wage man hours spent setting up dominos: $146672
Renting a Backstreet Boy for 90 minutes: $5000
Realizing you're thirty, a virgin, and still live in your parents basement: Priceless
Becausw english is an utterly ugly language or as my (french) grandmother uses to say:
Spanish is like singing, french is like talking, german is like spitting and english is like vomiting.
Greetings,
Rince
If you enjoyed watching all those millions of dominoes toppling, you ought to check out Fiat Lux If you enjoy anything to do with CG animation, you should also check this out. It's a rather impressive CG short of thousands of dominoes about the size of the monolith from 2001 (The small one that appeared before the apes - not the giant one in space) toppling through the interior of St. Peter's Basilica. As an added bonus, if you like shiny objects, the domino-monoliths are highly reflective. It's quite a sight to behold. My crude explanation doesn't do Fiat Lux justice. Go check it out for yourself!
They were not even synchronized with the little pendulum breaks. That was so stupid you missed 5 minutes of dominos and then had to watch that damn pendulum for 5 other minutes. They tried to fill that time as best as they could but still it would have been much better to use the same breaks as the others.
Other than that, the show was amazing!
True warriors use the Klingon Google
"They even had time delays of more than 5min each, built into the system to allow for advertising intermissions."
Exactly, afterall they have to put atleast something worth watching in the show.
What's under yellowstone?
>110 comments and no one posted the reason why dominos are so important in a true geek's life.
Don't forget to think different.
And then thought that someone else here needed to know. Listen, Bob- that's not a very good distinction. There's got to be a self help group out there for people like you.
I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
It just horrible enought it took place in my town here in the netherelands....
...trying to get us back at #1 of education country.....
Judging by that, the Domino record is probably easier to attain. You know you have a long, hard road to education when you can't even spell the name of your own nation.
--
"Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.