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JustRandomVR
Released: 2 months ago
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Meta Quest 3, and Quest Pro with stereoscopic color passthrough, Pico 4 (monoscopic color passthrough).
Compatible headsets:
Quest 2, Valve Index (monoscopic black and white passthrough).
Passthrough is not compatible yet for Oculus Link cable.
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Have you ever wondered what happened to the casing stones of this seventh wonder of the ancient world? The Great Pyramid of Giza was built by King Khufu in 2550 BCE and was once encased in highly polished, white limestone that likely reflected the sun from many miles away. After 3800 years, an earthquake in 1303 loosened the stones, allowing for the growing populace of Cairo to remove them and repurpose them in the construction of mosques and other buildings and roads in the area. Some of the casing stones still remain around the base of the great pyramid, but most were removed.
Ridley Scott gave us one of the more questionable scenes in his film on Napoleon Bonaparte. In the famous scene, Napoleon orders his troops to fire cannonballs at the casing stones near the apex of the Pyramid of Khafre. But there is no evidence that this actually occurred in history. In fact, Napoleon was impressed by both the pyramids and the Great Sphinx statue. So it makes little sense that he'd want to destroy these historic monuments. The scene establishes his hubris as a leader and his grandiose self-perception, but it never really happened.
Ridley Scott gave us one of the more questionable scenes in his film on Napoleon Bonaparte. In the famous scene, Napoleon orders his troops to fire cannonballs at the casing stones near the apex of the Pyramid of Khafre. But there is no evidence that this actually occurred in history. In fact, Napoleon was impressed by both the pyramids and the Great Sphinx statue. So it makes little sense that he'd want to destroy these historic monuments. The scene establishes his hubris as a leader and his grandiose self-perception, but it never really happened.