Before AI, we just had insane people.
78ReplyBefore AI we have Silent Hill.
12Reply
Birds with hands
19ReplyHow does this make more sense? They can't bend their beaks the same way we can bend our thumb and finger
15ReplyTouch the tip of your index (also known as fore finger)to the tip of your thumb. There is no bending involved and you can generate a decent amount of force and pick things up that way.
11ReplyThis changes everything. Only going to use my beak for eating now.
4Reply
Some kind of can. But not really the same way.
1Reply
If you think this is fucked up, birds have tiny little deformed hands on their wings kind of like how animators will reduce the scale of a bone for a part of a model they want to hide.
10ReplyFrom the foundational textbook "Garden of Earthly Delights" by H. Bosch et al
8ReplyI'm sorry I still don't totally understand. I don't mean to be dumb, I just really wish they labeled the different parts.
6ReplyI looked closely at it, comparing it to the pigeon currently nesting in our windowbox, and I can definitely say they do not look the same.
5ReplySee my reply to the other person in this thread.
2ReplyBut where's the mouth functionality?
3Reply
I just want to know if birds go around thinking, “Crushing your head! Crushing your head!”
5ReplyHas science gone too far? Find out in the scattered audio logs left behind in the mysteriously abandoned research complex.
4ReplyAh yes because so many birds have prehensile beaks lol
1ReplyA bunch of birds have prehensile beaks; it just means "grasping". Macaws, parrots, and cockatoos for example.
4Reply