It’s 200x faster than a human as long as you don’t include the 3 years it took to build it. Hack Pack is a DIY robot subscription box that’s perfect for teens and adults with no coding experience required! Get 1 free box at crunchlabs.com/puzzle
I love tammys personality. She evokes such a genius attitude while being humble and comedic at the same time. She is the type of person who you would like to just converse with :)
I was worried for a few minutes that Mark would just not mention the stuffmadehere video. Then he spends the time to give props to a better engineer. Class act Mr. Rober
I was worried about this until he finally brought it up and gave some awesome kudos where they were definitely deserved. Stuffmadehere is a great channel!
I think Tammy deserves a rematch where both teams get to play to their strengths. Give the robot a white puzzle, and give Tammy a picture puzzle. Both with the same amount of pieces, of course.
Glad to hear Stuff Made Hear mentioned. I love his work and its great to hear Mark's praise of him. It would be cool to see a collab some time. Also, nice job on accomplishing what he couldn't on this. Seriously impressive. It seems like a very similar design to his, but with those extra stability functions to make sure it gets the pieces in tightly.
to be fair he has also taken longer, and has a team helping for his. what SMH did while still lengthy, is absurdly impressive for one dude. which Mark highlights as well.
@@timesnewrman I used the correct hear. I am hearing Mark's praise of him, as in Marks voice produced words praising SMH that then entered my eardrums. Thus I heard it.
Robot could invert the image so the puzzle is grey cardboard side up.. I'm assuming he skipped imaged puzzles because the image would interfere with the edge sort
I heard some rumblings about this video at VidCon the other week, and I was like, well it can't be a jigsaw puzzle robot because that other guy already did one. And the person I was talking to was like, 👀👀👀 As the person with what's probably the largest solid-color jigsaw puzzle collection in the world, I'd be happy to provide more samples for the robot to learn on!
Can we take a moment to talk about how ingenious the "tap" protocol is?!?! Really great stuff Mark! Really glad to see StuffMadeHere get some more recognition!
Tammy is my hero, not necessarily because she's the world champion at puzzles (and Sudoku), but because she seems like a great person to just be around.
To be clear, Tammy is fantastic at jigsaw puzzling (I can't speak to her current Sudoku skill), but is not the world champion at either jigsaw puzzles (Alejandro Clemente Leon -- Tammy was 49th at last year's) or Sudoku (Tantan Dai -- to my knowledge Tammy has not competed in ~15 years)
@@josephnation9063she is a world champion in 500 piece speed puzzling where she got a Guinness recognition, and she regularly gets top 10 and some top 20 finishes in the various parts of the same competitions as Alejandro
I really appreciate the full write up linked in the description! I was really curious at the software aspect (as a a software engineer) so thank you for including a way for us to see the juicy details.
Nahhh Mark has soo many secret projects, like in every video he says "I've been trying this for 3+ years", like WHAT!! How much is this guy doing! Plus he still posts monthly videos, mad respect
You'd be amazed how much this happens in the programming world, we tend to overcomplicate the process and make it more complex than it needs to be. One thing that I try to teach newer programmers is to boil it down as much as possible to reach the most basic fundamentals of the problem they're trying to solve.
I love that this video is not made around selling your new hack pack or crunch labs packets but instead just pure, raw science while sometimes talking about your new products, which is logical. I really missed this kind of content and I'm so happy to learn about science again!
Its ok Tammy. For the rematch, the robot needs to open the box, dump it out, and sort the pieces for a color puzzle. Also, you could walk over to the robot's table and move a couple of pieces on the table!
How complicated would the changes/additions required be if you wanted to enable Jigsaw to also be able to solve puzzles with some identically shaped pieces, and/or solve two (small) puzzles at once, especially ones that are identical in shape but have different images? I ask only because we had some like this while I was growing up, and while Jigsaw is absolutely awesome, my brain can't help but wonder how to make him even better 🤔 Also congrats, this project is huge and awesome and I am so glad you all persevered. Your videos over the years were honestly a decent part of my decision to now be studying to become an engineer myself.
seemed to be educated trial and error/heuristics. anyone could do it. she said herself her shape memory isnt the best. she usually uses other methods to solve these that arent present on the all white puzzle
Jigsaw benefits based on shape. Tammy benefits based on design/colors. Do a competition with Tammy having a picture puzzle, and jigsaw an all-white puzzle. Same number of pieces.
Minor nitpick at 1:25. The chart seems to imply that dinosaurs evolved from crocodilians and pterosaurs evolved from dinosaurs which just isn’t the case. Dinosaurs and pterosaurs are separate and they and crocodilians are archosaurs sharing a common ancestor. How the chart should be is that archosaurs separates into two groups Avemetatarsalia (birds and relatives) and Pseudosuchia (crocodilians and relatives). Dinosaurs and pterosaurs should side by side under the group Avemetatarsalia. Pterosaurs should not be directly connected to dinosaurs.
aight now let's give jigsaw the infinite galaxy puzzle or one of those other puzzles where splines don't align and you can't necessarily draw a path between adjacent splines that hits every piece
or an 'impossibles' brand puzzle. that's the ones with repetitive images (like a bunch of goldfish), all the pieces are cut identically, including the edge pieces. (no straight edges!) oh... and 3 extra pieces...
Both you and Destin from SmarterEveryDay are the best at explaining things. Could literally listen to both of y'all just explain how things work for hours. Yall should look into doing audio books
Now let's see this work on puzzles with irregular shaped pieces, OR the ones where EVERY PIECE is the identical shape! AND, just because your robot doesn't use the picture, I think you should have a picture based jigsaw competition against Tammy.
the robot wont stand a chance with picture. tammy finished 500 pieces in half an hour. 1000 pieces maybe 2 hours max. the robot itself is fast, but limited by motor function. no matter what it will finished everything in 4 hours.
It is really funny to me how often UA-camrs get idea sniped without either of them knowing. It's also super fun to watch both of the videos so I'm not complaining.
Absolutely. Even if it's the same goal, it's still a different process and different aesthetics and different decisions to handle different problems. No two engineering feats are the same. Even if they have the exact same end goal. Now I want to see the two robots compete!
Ooh that'd be so fun. It also in a way shows stuff to why projects have large teams a lot of the time, as SMH I believe did it basically alone, and Rober in the video highlighted multiple people that helped. I really like both videos and will be rewatching them again lol.
Great video Mark! The steps you went through explaining the algorithm is a great example of what it's like to design an algorithm yourself. Finding clever solutions like subtracting two splines is always so much fun and so rewarding. It's why I love computer science so much. Also it's funny how often graphs (node/edges, not x/y) pop up. They are a concept anyone outside of math/compsci/compengi doesn't really study, afaik, but we use them everyday for all sorts of tasks.
Probably my favorite video from you so far! Thoroughly enjoyed it, especially explaining the entire process of how jigsaw worked and the problems you encountered with the solutions to those problems.
I'd love to see Jigsaw vs. Karen Puzzles! Karen collects solid-colored puzzles, so she has a bit more practice with them. It's her expertise more than Tammy's
@@dessel5683 Apart from all the people in the world who think reading / writing / communicating accurately has any value (*feint means something completely different) ... but in any event, now that your grammar skills are a little better, perhaps you'll have some time to work on your personality (and manners).
It is just so fascinating that the easiest, most mundane tasks for humans (looking at all the pieces/taking pictures of them) are the hardest and most time-consuming for the robot. Whereas the hardest task of building a puzzle for humans (actually solving the puzzle for where the pieces go) can be done by a robot in less than a minute.
@@saitejageddada3109 Not really. I mainly write enterprise software, which is more like "move this piece of data from one system to another system". Way different than what the guys in the video were doing.
Being a Mark Rober watcher and a speed puzzle enjoyer is being confused initially when it was Tammy and not Alejandro until he clarified that it was Guiness World Record rather than the worlds competition.
Had a similar confusion lol I dont know how he does on single color puzzles, but I wouldn't mind seeing how he'd do against the robot Or even a pair or team up against him
Same I was like Tammy is great but she's not the world's fastest, not the US fastest, nor California's fastest, nor even Los Angeles' fastest. Was a bit misleading.
Rather than take picture of each piece one by one, it should be possible to calibrate the photo to correct for the lensing effects, which is commonly done in microscopy. For example, you could take a photo of a bunch of rulers oriented along the x-axis and another photo of rulers oriented along the y-axis, and figure out the transformation to correct the photo. Then take a few photos with the correction, stitch them all together, and run the same routine. May need an additional calculation to determine where each piece is located for pickup now.
It’s 200x faster than a human as long as you don’t include the 3 years it took to build it. Hack Pack is a DIY robot subscription box that’s perfect for teens and adults with no coding experience required! Get 1 free box at crunchlabs.com/puzzle
Hi
Epic
Hi mark
I 1
Sorry no money 😂
Very cool. But I would like to see a rematch where the puzzle is a picture and not all white.
Yooo the 8 bit guy!!!
Woah! I didn't expect to see you here. Also yeah I agree! I would love to see the speed difference
登録して😢
Bro loss first in Mr beast challenge
And we know you did it on purpose 😢😢
Or a challenge where they both get a Simone Gertz "One Piece Missing" plain white jigsaw puzzle.
"my family will still love me" - Tammy is awesome!
Not only is she the puzzle champ, she is also a master trashtalker.
I guess this is why Mark didn't give her a pictured puzzle... he was adamant in saying that if jigsaw lost he'd no longer "love" it. 😂
@@aliceg1212"My love is very conditional" There's an Asian parent joke in there somewhere
This while he randomly hacks at a log with a big knife asking "are you nervous Tammy??"
@NajeebGamer1 you don't need it, trust me
I love tammys personality. She evokes such a genius attitude while being humble and comedic at the same time. She is the type of person who you would like to just converse with :)
The robot may be much faster than her with solving puzzles, but it can never replace her personality.
I agree Vincent. 👍
I was thinking the same. Tammy is pretty awesome.
Most scientists: "Make it look all futuristic"
Mark Rober: "Just add a pair of googly eyes and you're good"
I was worried for a few minutes that Mark would just not mention the stuffmadehere video. Then he spends the time to give props to a better engineer. Class act Mr. Rober
thinking the same exact thing
on the other hand, Mark also published source code & technical details! Which have some fascinating details in them!
Fr
I was worried about this until he finally brought it up and gave some awesome kudos where they were definitely deserved. Stuffmadehere is a great channel!
Came here to stan for stuffmadehere too!
I think Tammy deserves a rematch where both teams get to play to their strengths. Give the robot a white puzzle, and give Tammy a picture puzzle. Both with the same amount of pieces, of course.
I agree. That would be quite suspensful. Both for us and Mark.
Came to say this
Or a cheaper puzzle with repeated piece shapes
It doesnt matter to the robot if it is pictured or not so you can just make them both do the pictured puzzle.
plus make the robot open the box and separate the pieces
I worked with Tammy, we even sang in the office acapella group. She is a wonderful person of so many different talents!
Really?
@@Gabe-vw2ux nah im sure that was just a prank
@@hamza-chaudhry Some people have jobs. Effort for compensation. That work.
Bh vjhhuh
Happy Diwali. May everyone prosper with peace and stability in this auspicious occasion.
Glad to hear Stuff Made Hear mentioned. I love his work and its great to hear Mark's praise of him. It would be cool to see a collab some time. Also, nice job on accomplishing what he couldn't on this. Seriously impressive. It seems like a very similar design to his, but with those extra stability functions to make sure it gets the pieces in tightly.
less go mate it's bluey
@@JB-DJ ??? Huh?
to be fair he has also taken longer, and has a team helping for his. what SMH did while still lengthy, is absurdly impressive for one dude. which Mark highlights as well.
I'd like to point out you typed "Hear" instead of "Here", but overall i agree
@@timesnewrman I used the correct hear. I am hearing Mark's praise of him, as in Marks voice produced words praising SMH that then entered my eardrums. Thus I heard it.
Next episode: Tammy coming back with a baseball bat asking jigsaw if it can run
LMAO, that was dark
Probably it will use its tricycle
@@sygad1 I'm thinking of Office Space printer scene XD
Jigsaw is already running, so is your fridge
bro stole the vid idea
Tammy has such a great personality and quick wit. Would love to see more of her in this channel !
happy diwali 🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🪔🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
I want to see a fair and true matchup and have Tammy and Jigsaw both solve a puzzle with an image.
And the robot should not already know the puzzle pieces prior with pictures.
@@zyto7904 They took the pictures from the start of the competition, so it was the same playing field for both.
nah she would win
Robot could invert the image so the puzzle is grey cardboard side up.. I'm assuming he skipped imaged puzzles because the image would interfere with the edge sort
She would win easily with in off the shelf puzzle. I love how he designs competitions so he can win.
I heard some rumblings about this video at VidCon the other week, and I was like, well it can't be a jigsaw puzzle robot because that other guy already did one. And the person I was talking to was like, 👀👀👀 As the person with what's probably the largest solid-color jigsaw puzzle collection in the world, I'd be happy to provide more samples for the robot to learn on!
I don't think that their algorythm would work with a nonstandard piece cut, so it would be interesting to see it try a Krypt puzzle
Ooohhh, maybe you could also try racing Jigsaw while you're there!
I was looking for Karen's comment!!! 😂😂😂
Karen, it should have been you!
Try the Ketchup puzzle
the puzzle robot sure put those pieces together fast 💨
Here before this blows up!
If the puzzle was colored, then the champion would have a chance to defeat the robot
Assuming a UA-cam employee sees this you might want to fix the bot problem
@@UA-cam oh...UA-cam official.
@@UA-cam youtube
Happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali happy diwali mark rober
Can we take a moment to talk about how ingenious the "tap" protocol is?!?! Really great stuff Mark! Really glad to see StuffMadeHere get some more recognition!
We take the best inspirations from nature! (In this case, human behavior)
Some puzzles have pieces that have the exact same shape, but different pictures, that would make for an interesting challenge
True, when unpainting it, more than one piece may be incorrectly placed.
Also when he said our hands are amazing a muscle in our arms pull a string moving our fingers
Jigsaw dropping the final piece perfectly into place at 19:43 was cold 🥶
19:45
@@mnangler2383 no? 19:44 maybe. but not 19:45
0:14 do an alien puzzle
gotta 1v1 the StuffMadeHere jigsaw puzzle robot from a year ago
EDIT: 4:50 STUFFMADEHERE SHOUTOUT!!
E
1M tree 🌲 plant please 🥺 Mark Robber
حرفيا كلنا
YES
AAAAA, spolier. That's an exact thing I was thinking about
Tammy is my hero, not necessarily because she's the world champion at puzzles (and Sudoku), but because she seems like a great person to just be around.
To be clear, Tammy is fantastic at jigsaw puzzling (I can't speak to her current Sudoku skill), but is not the world champion at either jigsaw puzzles (Alejandro Clemente Leon -- Tammy was 49th at last year's) or Sudoku (Tantan Dai -- to my knowledge Tammy has not competed in ~15 years)
@@josephnation9063she is a world champion in 500 piece speed puzzling where she got a Guinness recognition, and she regularly gets top 10 and some top 20 finishes in the various parts of the same competitions as Alejandro
glaze
I would see her compete with a puzzle that has an image on it. That could be a worthy challenge.
Picture puzzle -_-
She would win.
Or against a team of 4 (since the robot had human help to flip pieces etc.
Happy diwali to all of you
Clicked the video for the robot. Stayed for Tammy. She seems so sweet and fun
Clicked for the robot, stayed for the robot
"Even if I lost today my family would still love me. Would you still love Jigsaw?"
"No. My love is very conditional"
hey
I’m surprised no one else commented that!
@@TheHarbro hey
Jigsaw: that hurt buddy!
Mark summoned his inner Asian fr
I really appreciate the full write up linked in the description! I was really curious at the software aspect (as a a software engineer) so thank you for including a way for us to see the juicy details.
I can't find the link in the description. I see 9 links that are different things.
The fact you can crochet makes me like your channel more
Nahhh Mark has soo many secret projects, like in every video he says "I've been trying this for 3+ years", like WHAT!! How much is this guy doing! Plus he still posts monthly videos, mad respect
Using the area overlap to solve the edge matching problem is such a simple but genious idea
You'd be amazed how much this happens in the programming world, we tend to overcomplicate the process and make it more complex than it needs to be. One thing that I try to teach newer programmers is to boil it down as much as possible to reach the most basic fundamentals of the problem they're trying to solve.
I love that this video is not made around selling your new hack pack or crunch labs packets but instead just pure, raw science while sometimes talking about your new products, which is logical. I really missed this kind of content and I'm so happy to learn about science again!
I just found your channel and I think this is dope!! I’m 37 by the way😂🤣🤣
I want a rematch of your robot vs Tammy on a full color puzzle where all pieces are the same shape. That’s exactly as fair as this challenge was.
Its ok Tammy. For the rematch, the robot needs to open the box, dump it out, and sort the pieces for a color puzzle. Also, you could walk over to the robot's table and move a couple of pieces on the table!
"If Jigsaw lost would you still love him?"
"No."
Bro loss first in Mr beast challenge
And we know you did it on purpose 😢😢
Broke jigsaw's heart into as many pieces as the puzzle he worked on
Jigsaw: Birgün dünyayı ele geçireceğiz.
How complicated would the changes/additions required be if you wanted to enable Jigsaw to also be able to solve puzzles with some identically shaped pieces, and/or solve two (small) puzzles at once, especially ones that are identical in shape but have different images?
I ask only because we had some like this while I was growing up, and while Jigsaw is absolutely awesome, my brain can't help but wonder how to make him even better 🤔
Also congrats, this project is huge and awesome and I am so glad you all persevered. Your videos over the years were honestly a decent part of my decision to now be studying to become an engineer myself.
I'm astounded that she was even able to complete that much of the all-white puzzle by the time the robot finished.
seemed to be educated trial and error/heuristics. anyone could do it. she said herself her shape memory isnt the best. she usually uses other methods to solve these that arent present on the all white puzzle
登録して😢
@@jonathanodude6660 No, anyone cannot do it.
@@camipco yes, anyone can align edge pieces when given 2 hours.
@@jonathanodude6660 We all await the video of you doing it!
your work is not only informative but also visually stunning!
17:50 i love how the robot became sad after what mark said
Tammy was such a champ!
Jigsaw benefits based on shape. Tammy benefits based on design/colors. Do a competition with Tammy having a picture puzzle, and jigsaw an all-white puzzle. Same number of pieces.
I loved that line about how her family would still love her. Tammy was great in this video and it was cool to see Kristin Bell too.
Replacing the lead in a mechanical pencil is the perfect analogy for the precision window.
Happy Diwali mark rober
Bro, at 17:57, mark just made jigsaw sad 😂😂😂😂
Mark is asian (confirmed)
17:19 nicely done, mark. you're a genius.
That birthday cake example is exactly why people love this channel. Knowing to quantifying something like that is special
Indeed. Relating new knowledge to what we already know is a great way to learn new things.
17:11 gotta love how I’m crocheting as I’m watching this
"Have you ever stopped to think just how amazing our hands are?"
Yes Mark, I have been incredibly stoned, thanks for asking.
Mi exact same thought
Very stoned rn, and this Mark Rober and Nilered videos are blowing my mind.
They are wonderfully designed.
So glad go see Sean getting the credit he deserves! That guy is absolutely incredible
Awesome idea. Thanks for shouting out stuffmadehere his channel is incredible too
how insane!!! puzzle-assembling robot fight
I’m 55 and finding Mark’s channel is the first time I’ve ever been so excited about science ❤
"my family will still love me even if I lose". That's so nice Tammy, that makes one of us!
Big ups to Tammy. What a great sport and guest!
happy Diwali from India
I’m surprised no one’s talking about how mark literally crochets 😭
As someone who crochets, that is honestly amazing to know 🤭
probably had a crochet robot do it for him off camera, and also a whittling robot whittle the wooden trophy.
Cuz 90 year Olds don't watch UA-cam
Same here! It's like learning your favourite teacher watches the same shows you watch
@@KX36 ya there's no way he did it that clean and fast LOL
Minor nitpick at 1:25. The chart seems to imply that dinosaurs evolved from crocodilians and pterosaurs evolved from dinosaurs which just isn’t the case. Dinosaurs and pterosaurs are separate and they and crocodilians are archosaurs sharing a common ancestor. How the chart should be is that archosaurs separates into two groups Avemetatarsalia (birds and relatives) and Pseudosuchia (crocodilians and relatives). Dinosaurs and pterosaurs should side by side under the group Avemetatarsalia. Pterosaurs should not be directly connected to dinosaurs.
This deserves more likes.
As your average paleo-need I did not like to scroll down SO far to find this comment
Username checks out
5:13 it is absurd how smart that mf is
Happy Diwali mark bhai
Having just done Musculoskeletal anatomy, I appreciate the hand shoutout. It's fascinating how much is going on in your hands.
"Measure once, cut twice." - Mark Rober
Best quote
I love how he's putting together a Bluey puzzle as an example for the steps.
aight now let's give jigsaw the infinite galaxy puzzle or one of those other puzzles where splines don't align and you can't necessarily draw a path between adjacent splines that hits every piece
or an 'impossibles' brand puzzle. that's the ones with repetitive images (like a bunch of goldfish), all the pieces are cut identically, including the edge pieces. (no straight edges!) oh... and 3 extra pieces...
"Bhago Bhago!" as fireworks take flight!
With lamps and colors, we light up the sky,
Wishing you joy-Happy Diwali, oh so high!
Hey, if Jigsaw is playing to his strengths (white), Tammy should be able to use hers too (colours/patterns).
Both you and Destin from SmarterEveryDay are the best at explaining things. Could literally listen to both of y'all just explain how things work for hours. Yall should look into doing audio books
I really enjoyed the explanation of how the edges are compared and the pathfinding logic. Very clever solution.
Agreed
I love the robots little “customary final tap”😂😂
Now let's see this work on puzzles with irregular shaped pieces, OR the ones where EVERY PIECE is the identical shape! AND, just because your robot doesn't use the picture, I think you should have a picture based jigsaw competition against Tammy.
the robot wont stand a chance with picture. tammy finished 500 pieces in half an hour. 1000 pieces maybe 2 hours max. the robot itself is fast, but limited by motor function. no matter what it will finished everything in 4 hours.
@@MrWimbomahadi Then it really is not, yet, the winner.
Another actually fire upload from Mark 🔥🔥🔥
Collab we never expected
Only 9 likes?
It is really funny to me how often UA-camrs get idea sniped without either of them knowing. It's also super fun to watch both of the videos so I'm not complaining.
Absolutely. Even if it's the same goal, it's still a different process and different aesthetics and different decisions to handle different problems.
No two engineering feats are the same. Even if they have the exact same end goal.
Now I want to see the two robots compete!
Ooh that'd be so fun. It also in a way shows stuff to why projects have large teams a lot of the time, as SMH I believe did it basically alone, and Rober in the video highlighted multiple people that helped. I really like both videos and will be rewatching them again lol.
He did it alone. In a fraction of the time.
@@ChrisS-oo6fl He's definitely built different. Imagine if he had a few clones of himself.
Bad timing using a certain word in your comment.😮 just saying
Happy Diwali Mark , it's our pleasure that we joined your channel.
10:56 I haven't finished the video yet, but I audibly said "Wow" when Jigsaw started adjusting the piece. Brilliant.
Great video Mark! The steps you went through explaining the algorithm is a great example of what it's like to design an algorithm yourself. Finding clever solutions like subtracting two splines is always so much fun and so rewarding. It's why I love computer science so much. Also it's funny how often graphs (node/edges, not x/y) pop up. They are a concept anyone outside of math/compsci/compengi doesn't really study, afaik, but we use them everyday for all sorts of tasks.
Probably my favorite video from you so far! Thoroughly enjoyed it, especially explaining the entire process of how jigsaw worked and the problems you encountered with the solutions to those problems.
2:34 is a song
I'd love to see Jigsaw vs. Karen Puzzles! Karen collects solid-colored puzzles, so she has a bit more practice with them. It's her expertise more than Tammy's
Yeah, Karen would have been a great collab for this video and he clearly knows who she is because he used a piece of her video.
who?
Even Karen admits Tammy is usually faster. They've done videos about it.
@@matthewhall5571 yes, but this isn't just any puzzle. This is a solid color puzzle.
I would have loved that!
Bro went from talking about a robot and jigsaw puzzles to human anatomy in like 30 seconds. Respect
and my short attention spanned self willingly sat and listened to it 😂 he makes learning stuff so much fun :)
Did he say chickens are mammals and have bones like us because evolution?
Chickens and turtles?
love human anatomy - best subject
Jigsaw, your final challenge…
Let yo bih go through yo phone
Let yo bih go through your puzzle
let yo bih solve yo puzzle
let yo robot solve yo puzzle
Let they witch ponder thy orb.
Happy Diwali ❤❤
Love from India ❤❤
Are we going to talk about how Mark just casually brought in his "dear friend" Kristen Bell??!
Apparently not... 🙄
He brought her in LITERALLY just to prank her the madlad.
According to the internet, he's attend a dinner party with both Courtney Cox AND Jennifer Anniston (among a host of other famous tv personalities)
this level of precision just 20 years ago would make most engineers faint
*faint
@@icojb25 i edited it but i want you to know that nobody appreciates your comment
@@dessel5683 Apart from all the people in the world who think reading / writing / communicating accurately has any value (*feint means something completely different) ... but in any event, now that your grammar skills are a little better, perhaps you'll have some time to work on your personality (and manners).
@@dessel5683 I appreciate his comment.
@@icojb25 Thank you for correcting the original commenter. I fully appreciate the effort that you put in
I’m amazed by the whole thing, but particularly how the drone programmer saw the correct algorithm so quickly!
Happy diwali bhaiya love form rajasthan (india)
Bhagooooooo...............!😅😅😅😅
I think these guys have a very difficult job and they've been trying for three years, they're great.
It is just so fascinating that the easiest, most mundane tasks for humans (looking at all the pieces/taking pictures of them) are the hardest and most time-consuming for the robot. Whereas the hardest task of building a puzzle for humans (actually solving the puzzle for where the pieces go) can be done by a robot in less than a minute.
13:30 the @KarenPuzzles cameo I was looking for!
I would have happily shared insights from my solid color puzzle collection for this video!
Happy diwali mark bro ❤️💕💕💕
Printing to the console at 9:30 is probably why it took a minute instead of seconds.
Do you have any sample codes project that do something similar, I've never thought about the it
Also rewriting from python to a compiled language can easily cut the time to 1/30.
@@saitejageddada3109 Not really. I mainly write enterprise software, which is more like "move this piece of data from one system to another system". Way different than what the guys in the video were doing.
It could be an async console write
@@ashlyneSAsync slows things down when used during cpu intensive tasks because managing the queue takes time.
I personally want to see a rematch with a puzzle that is an actual picture instead of a solid color
18:52 most motherly thing to say. “no i’ll look later”
HAPPY DIWALI MARK ROBER FROM INDIA ❤❤🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🌌🌌🌌
the little wiggle and tap in on the pieces made me smile
I love that you used the puzzle from Bluey at the beginning.
Yeah!! Bluey fan :D
@@Ememylasagnahooray!
Being a Mark Rober watcher and a speed puzzle enjoyer is being confused initially when it was Tammy and not Alejandro until he clarified that it was Guiness World Record rather than the worlds competition.
Had a similar confusion lol
I dont know how he does on single color puzzles, but I wouldn't mind seeing how he'd do against the robot
Or even a pair or team up against him
Also, Tammy and Mark both live in California. The World Championships I believe use 500 pieces for solo.
Same I was like Tammy is great but she's not the world's fastest, not the US fastest, nor California's fastest, nor even Los Angeles' fastest. Was a bit misleading.
Happy diwali Mark sir love from India ❤❤
Makes me smile that you including a write up of the project available to us😁
That intro about humans being special actually made me feel special and proud of myself.
Rather than take picture of each piece one by one, it should be possible to calibrate the photo to correct for the lensing effects, which is commonly done in microscopy. For example, you could take a photo of a bunch of rulers oriented along the x-axis and another photo of rulers oriented along the y-axis, and figure out the transformation to correct the photo. Then take a few photos with the correction, stitch them all together, and run the same routine. May need an additional calculation to determine where each piece is located for pickup now.
You don't need to do the rulers picture at all. You can automatically correct the pictures based on camera and lens models.