Yeah, Beksinski is a great inspiration for me. I've been working for a while on an ambiental series with imagery inspired by his work, coupled with a 40k aesthetics.
@@prometheusstudioambient Oh I didn't know the Horus Heresy was also called 30k, I have a pretty shallow understanding of Warhammer but it's interesting.
There is just something fascinating about the concept of machinery that is thousands of years old, and still operating. I don't know why, it just holds my mind when I see it. As an inventor, fabricator, machinist, mechanic, and all around tinkerer, I have an excellent grasp of how long things last on this planet. Most general best case scenarios 150-200 years with the most well-built and well maintained/stored machines we have. And those are very basic, like rifling machines, lathes, or steam powered machines. Even those are hard to call "machines" in the same sense as this would be. More like analogue pieces of metal and shafts which We manipulate in motion. To think that something like this, could just be sitting somewhere in a desert, still creaking, lighting up, and probably speaking, after more time than our minds are actually capable of grasping, it would feel like a product of absolute mechanical gods. Or in sci-fi movies where they activate some abandoned storage case in a swamp, or long abandoned utilities in a forgotten base that they are depending on for survival, and it just lights up and just works. If barely. I love that concept.
Money is and will increasingly be the bottleneck of mankind if we don't get rid of it, in one way or another. Everything we do or build is calculated on the basis that it need to be profitable. So everything is made at low cost, just sturdy enough to last a few years. But it's not that much a lack of ability If we were in a Warhammer like universe and Earth was ruled by an 'Emperor of Mankind' and he was to contact let's say the staff of ASUS and *command* them to build him a computer-like machine, with a highly sophisticated integrated manual generator and a design so sturdy it would be able to last atleast centuries... I'm fairly certain they would be able to do it. Of course, that would not take the shape of a plastic laptop with screws and cheap components... ^^
There was a video somewhere "on the internets" that showed some guys in like Russia or Ukraine digging out from the swamp, buried in mud, sludge and water an old WWII tank (SU-152), they struggle a bit with it and after they wash it just a little they put a few liters of i think diesel in it and it WORKS, i was like WAT :)
Well to be fair - it is much easier for machines to survive a looong time in space compared to earth. No rust, no wind, no dust particles, no moisture, no gravity and depending on location potentially no differences in temperature. Even on Mars which still has dust, wind and gravity the different rovers we sent there outlived their expected service life significantly.
@@wanjanechtangroeger The surpassed their service expectations by the amount of years you can count on two hands.. Even Voyager still being operable isn't even a blink of time. I'm talking thousands and thousands of years..
@@Stephen64138 We do not have the materials which could withstand a few thousand years of unsupervised, exposed to the elements, mechanical operation for any kind of autonomous machine. We just don't. Maybe, Maaayyybe the most well-built, solid gold components, computer built by ASUS, set in a sealed clean room with inert gas might have a few dozen transistors operating after a few hundred years. I'm not challenging what could or couldn't be accomplished with the best current technology humans can offer, which still falls laughably short of timelines I am referring to. How does the example possibility of a computer you described have any relevance to any scenario I mentioned. You all are ENTIRELY missing the point of the concept I am describing, and the feeling that goes with it..
Some day this would be everyday life but....... I"m to old to see this. Amazing footage and the balance sounds PERFECT=Good effort, stay safe from a cross the distance 👍🏿😊🇬🇷
The ancient Red planet looms ominously in the distance and the ambient music of Dark Mars unfolds. Welcome to a place of solitude and contemplation, where the mysteries of cosmos are inspiring the Mars priesthood to continue to pursue the knowledge. The sounds of the unknown realms in a grand design echo through the landscape of ancient and forgotten machines, evoking a sense of isolation and wonder. 'Dark Mars" album (vol. 1) download: tarsus7.bandcamp.com/album/dark-mars 4K wallpaper image download (personal use only): www.patreon.com/posts/wallpaper-mars-97292418
Beautiful artwork and music, funny enough I was going to use the sort of artstyle especially for beksinski aspect for the cosmic horror for style of my Ip, Having admech style on top of it just makes it perfect.
Fantastic sound worlds! I subscribed-but no. The constant ads bent my mind. Sorry, I'm out. your competition is winning my meditation time. Keep up the great work though.
Ok, for the 100-th time... this channel isn't monetized, the video isn't monetized. YT introduced new policy to put ads on non-monetized material probably in order to either make the user channel to monetize (and thus become a part of their system) or to force a viewer to pay for the app, or go elsewhere to watch monetized videos (users who monetize can control the ads). The thing you're doing right now, by chosing to go elsewhere is actually reinforcing the monetized material to be watched more than non-monetized, this further enforcing the aggressive 'ads everywhere' policy and making NM users go down the drain in the algorhitm. Thanks for the good words about my content, though, and I understand your frustration. It's frustrating me too, but it is how it is.
Beksinski meets 30k meets space ambient, what a treat.
Yeah, Beksinski is a great inspiration for me. I've been working for a while on an ambiental series with imagery inspired by his work, coupled with a 40k aesthetics.
That's what I was thinking too 👍
What's 30k?
Warhammer 30,000 @@virtualmilkers1747
@@prometheusstudioambient
Oh I didn't know the Horus Heresy was also called 30k, I have a pretty shallow understanding of Warhammer but it's interesting.
There is just something fascinating about the concept of machinery that is thousands of years old, and still operating. I don't know why, it just holds my mind when I see it. As an inventor, fabricator, machinist, mechanic, and all around tinkerer, I have an excellent grasp of how long things last on this planet. Most general best case scenarios 150-200 years with the most well-built and well maintained/stored machines we have. And those are very basic, like rifling machines, lathes, or steam powered machines. Even those are hard to call "machines" in the same sense as this would be. More like analogue pieces of metal and shafts which We manipulate in motion. To think that something like this, could just be sitting somewhere in a desert, still creaking, lighting up, and probably speaking, after more time than our minds are actually capable of grasping, it would feel like a product of absolute mechanical gods. Or in sci-fi movies where they activate some abandoned storage case in a swamp, or long abandoned utilities in a forgotten base that they are depending on for survival, and it just lights up and just works. If barely. I love that concept.
Money is and will increasingly be the bottleneck of mankind if we don't get rid of it, in one way or another.
Everything we do or build is calculated on the basis that it need to be profitable. So everything is made at low cost, just sturdy enough to last a few years. But it's not that much a lack of ability
If we were in a Warhammer like universe and Earth was ruled by an 'Emperor of Mankind' and he was to contact let's say the staff of ASUS and *command* them to build him a computer-like machine, with a highly sophisticated integrated manual generator and a design so sturdy it would be able to last atleast centuries... I'm fairly certain they would be able to do it. Of course, that would not take the shape of a plastic laptop with screws and cheap components... ^^
There was a video somewhere "on the internets" that showed some guys in like Russia or Ukraine digging out from the swamp, buried in mud, sludge and water an old WWII tank (SU-152), they struggle a bit with it and after they wash it just a little they put a few liters of i think diesel in it and it WORKS, i was like WAT :)
Well to be fair - it is much easier for machines to survive a looong time in space compared to earth. No rust, no wind, no dust particles, no moisture, no gravity and depending on location potentially no differences in temperature. Even on Mars which still has dust, wind and gravity the different rovers we sent there outlived their expected service life significantly.
@@wanjanechtangroeger The surpassed their service expectations by the amount of years you can count on two hands.. Even Voyager still being operable isn't even a blink of time. I'm talking thousands and thousands of years..
@@Stephen64138 We do not have the materials which could withstand a few thousand years of unsupervised, exposed to the elements, mechanical operation for any kind of autonomous machine. We just don't. Maybe, Maaayyybe the most well-built, solid gold components, computer built by ASUS, set in a sealed clean room with inert gas might have a few dozen transistors operating after a few hundred years. I'm not challenging what could or couldn't be accomplished with the best current technology humans can offer, which still falls laughably short of timelines I am referring to. How does the example possibility of a computer you described have any relevance to any scenario I mentioned. You all are ENTIRELY missing the point of the concept I am describing, and the feeling that goes with it..
Some day this would be everyday life but....... I"m to old to see this. Amazing footage and the balance sounds PERFECT=Good effort, stay safe from a cross the distance 👍🏿😊🇬🇷
May the Blessed Forge create perfection. 🗝⚙🔗⛓🙏
"Strength in Faith, Strength in Steel."
*- Motto of House Durbach*
I aspire to the certainty of the blessed machine
@@LeLibrarium *+++ LA MACHINE ENDURE, LA MACHINE VEILLE +++*
I needed this so much. Thank you🎉❤
The ancient Red planet looms ominously in the distance and the ambient music of Dark Mars unfolds. Welcome to a place of solitude and contemplation, where the mysteries of cosmos are inspiring the Mars priesthood to continue to pursue the knowledge. The sounds of the unknown realms in a grand design echo through the landscape of ancient and forgotten machines, evoking a sense of isolation and wonder. 'Dark Mars" album (vol. 1) download:
tarsus7.bandcamp.com/album/dark-mars
4K wallpaper image download (personal use only):
www.patreon.com/posts/wallpaper-mars-97292418
I'm sensing a creative epic Minecraft build with this. Desert themed perhaps.
Beautiful artwork and music, funny enough I was going to use the sort of artstyle especially for beksinski aspect for the cosmic horror for style of my Ip, Having admech style on top of it just makes it perfect.
Excellent. Very inspiring and relaxing. Greetings!
Reminds me of Primordia
Игре нужны патчи, но игра реально занимательная.
the photo is creepy. like it
Looking at the picture, the answer is 42
10.05.lol
Love hitch hikers guide to the galaxy
kenshi vibes
Yeah it does
Valley of the dark lords soundtrack
👏👏👏👏
👍👍
🌹🔥
Second!
They'll soon get mature enough when there's no choice
You can't actually download this anywhere I think? I subscribed to your pateron but it's not there...
It's going to be uploaded soon. Volume one is available on Patreon. Also, the image is posted right now: www.patreon.com/posts/97292418
these backgrounds are great, what art software do you use?
its called paint
Fantastic sound worlds! I subscribed-but no. The constant ads bent my mind.
Sorry, I'm out. your competition is winning my meditation time.
Keep up the great work though.
Ok, for the 100-th time... this channel isn't monetized, the video isn't monetized. YT introduced new policy to put ads on non-monetized material probably in order to either make the user channel to monetize (and thus become a part of their system) or to force a viewer to pay for the app, or go elsewhere to watch monetized videos (users who monetize can control the ads). The thing you're doing right now, by chosing to go elsewhere is actually reinforcing the monetized material to be watched more than non-monetized, this further enforcing the aggressive 'ads everywhere' policy and making NM users go down the drain in the algorhitm.
Thanks for the good words about my content, though, and I understand your frustration. It's frustrating me too, but it is how it is.