The magic trick with rope At Harrah Casino in Las Vegas, the magician Mac King shows us unique "bay with rope". Using scissors cut a rope into pieces, but by magic, always ends up in the hands of a long rope.
The iPad makes magic; The magician Simon Pierro tries to persuade a shop customers that the iPad does everything.
Magic with the ball The British freestyle football world champion, Lia Lewis, gives us a glimpse of her impressive abilities.
When your neighbor gives you a gift A woman always feeds this squirrel, and the squirrel returned the favor by leaving a cookie in front of her door.
Adobe's magic dress Adobe has unveiled its fully interactive digital dress called Project Primrose, woven with glitter using liquid crystals. The dress acts as a screen, and can change plans in real time, or display some animations.
Destruction in the warehouse In a warehouse in the city of Chaozhou in China, two employees are moving toilet bowls and one wrong move will cause a hundred elevated bowls to fall. The workers will watch helplessly as the dominoes fall, which will last 20 seconds and destroy everything.
Claws aren't always useful A woman's dramatic effort, desperately struggling to pick up her bank card that has fallen to the ground, with her long nails.
The mystery with the magic basket The Troy discovered that since I started living with his girlfriend, various strange things happen at home. A funny skit from the Australian comic Troy Kinne.
Change photos with artificial intelligence Photo editing has reached a new level. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Computer Science, of the Sarbrucken Research Center, of MIT, of the University of Pennsylvania and Google, developed an image processing method using GAN (Productive contrastive network) which allows us to control almost everything in an image. You put two points and move the objects in the photo in 3D space.
The bowling ball that always strikes Mechanical engineer and inventor Mark Rober made some modifications to a bowling ball, so he can direct her and strike continuously.
Magic with a gas The heavy gas sulfur hexafluoride is 5 times heavier than air, which makes experiments with it look like magic tricks with one "invisible water".