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I propose a contest: closest possible render time to 23 hrs without
going over:
Calls to Noise: 18918604822 Calls to DNoise: 30417568372
Shadow Ray Tests: 21101794 Succeeded: 1948527
Smallest Alloc: 17 bytes
Largest Alloc: 163456 bytes
Peak memory used: 1023892 bytes
Total Scene Processing Times
Parse Time: 0 hours 0 minutes 0 seconds (0 seconds)
Photon Time: 0 hours 0 minutes 0 seconds (0 seconds)
Cloth Time: 0 hours 0 minutes 0 seconds (0 seconds)
Mechsim Time: 0 hours 0 minutes 0 seconds (0 seconds)
Render Time: 22 hours 59 minutes 58 seconds (82798 seconds)
Postpr. Time: 0 hours 0 minutes 0 seconds (0 seconds)
Total Time: 22 hours 59 minutes 58 seconds (82798 seconds)
CPU time used: kernel 5.83 seconds, user 82020.83 seconds, total
82026.66 seconds
Render averaged 3.75 PPS over 307200 pixels
POV-Ray finished
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Attachments:
Download 'img.10037.jpg' (66 KB)
Preview of image 'img.10037.jpg'
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news:421d3192@news.povray.org...
>
> I propose a contest: closest possible render time to 23 hrs without
> going over:
>
well... my 486-dx2 with 16 MB of Ram could render a translucid, reflective,
shiny, shadowed sphere on a checkered plane in this time
--
B Gimeno
estoeslarealidad
http://usuarios.lycos.es/game2413
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------
light_source{0,1}#local C=cylinder{x*-2,x*2,0.9}difference{box{-1,1}
object{C pigment{red 1}}object{C rotate y*90pigment{green 1}}object{
C rotate z*90 pigment{blue 1}}pigment{rgb 3}rotate 45 translate z*4}
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Jim Charter wrote:
That texture is incredible, and the switch to mesh was definitely for
the better. Don't like the table.
An interesting(?) idea I had during the last boli discussion was the
concept of a modern boli. A massive concrete bull idol covered with
decades of exhaust fumes, graffiti, concert posters, and pigeon crap.
-Shay
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Shay wrote:
> Jim Charter wrote:
>
> That texture is incredible, and the switch to mesh was definitely for
> the better.
Not mesh, iso's w displacement pattern. That is really the answer to
your question from before, "Is there something symbolized by using
blobs" The answer is that iso-blobing is where this is all headed, in
order to apply real displacement.
Don't like the table.
And it took up a lot of time even if it is using isowoods. My heart
really isn't in it to be honest, but I did make some technical
discoveries by examining and learning to use CHristoph's macros. More
along the lines of how to use paterns to perturb the form and get the
other patterns to follow the perturbations. I haven't yet come up with
the display solution for these studies, which means I can't put them in
context, which really means that I haven't yet realized what their
meaning to me really is.
>
> An interesting(?) idea I had during the last boli discussion was the
> concept of a modern boli. A massive concrete bull idol covered with
> decades of exhaust fumes, graffiti, concert posters, and pigeon crap.
>
Yes, yes, indeed, drawing connects between primitive magic and modern
context is a well mined vein, but one I find I am being drawn along
never-the-less. Was browsing the library yesterday looking for books on
African objects when I found I was engrossed instead by a picture book
of Leonard Baskin sculptures. Never dislked Baskin but always took him
at arms length. Later on he did endless prints of native americans
which was cool but got kinda the same. The earlier stuff was just
everything modernism hated with its seeming attempt to appropriate
gravitas by quoting classical art and mythology. But now his vision
looks a lot more interesting to me.
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"Shay" <ema### [at] yourhostcom> wrote in message
news:421df870@news.povray.org...
> An interesting(?) idea I had during the last boli discussion was the
> concept of a modern boli. A massive concrete bull idol covered with
> decades of exhaust fumes, graffiti, concert posters, and pigeon crap.
Forgot you'd been to London... ;)
~Steve~
>
> -Shay
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Jim Charter wrote:
>
> Not mesh, iso's w displacement pattern.
Nice shape. Never tried the isoblobs. I like corners too much.
>
> Yes, yes, indeed, drawing connects between primitive magic
> and modern context is a well mined vein,
Most done poorly in my opinion, however. Usually, in what I have seen,
some dull attempt at irony or even duller suggestion of some ancient
culture's effect on modern society. Both seem forced.
A modern idol represented *as* an idol, free of tired editorializing
about mystery, signifigance, or irony would IMO be refreshing. An idol
soaking up the ceremonial urban fluids of exhaust and pidgeon crap;
strengthened not diminished by them.
> Leonard Baskin
Had to google him. I liked the animal pictures.
-Shay
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St. wrote:
>
> "Shay" <ema### [at] yourhostcom> wrote in message
> news:421df870@news.povray.org...
>
>> An interesting(?) idea I had during the last boli discussion was the
>> concept of a modern boli. A massive concrete bull idol covered with
>> decades of exhaust fumes, graffiti, concert posters, and pigeon crap.
>
>
> Forgot you'd been to London... ;)
IIRC, London had massive concrete *lions* covered with decades of ... :)
-Shay
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"Shay" <ema### [at] yourhostcom> wrote in message
news:421f4280$1@news.povray.org...
> St. wrote:
>>
>> "Shay" <ema### [at] yourhostcom> wrote in message
>> news:421df870@news.povray.org...
>>
>>> An interesting(?) idea I had during the last boli discussion was the
>>> concept of a modern boli. A massive concrete bull idol covered with
>>> decades of exhaust fumes, graffiti, concert posters, and pigeon crap.
>>
>>
>> Forgot you'd been to London... ;)
>
> IIRC, London had massive concrete *lions* covered with decades of ... :)
:) That's what I was thinking of. There's a picture of me sitting on one
of them somewhere, aged eight(ish) with grey school shorts. Yes, they can
get 'messy'. ;)
~Steve~
>
> -Shay
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St. wrote:
> There's a picture of me sitting on one of them somewhere,
> aged eight(ish) with grey school shorts.
At least you grew out of it.
http://www.simcoparts.com/pics/trafalgar.jpg
screaming "yeeeeeeeee-haaaaw" at the time.
Apologies to Jim for abusing his thread.
follow-ups set, just in case.
-Shay
Post a reply to this message
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Shay wrote:
>
> A modern idol represented *as* an idol, free of tired editorializing
> about mystery, signifigance, or irony would IMO be refreshing. An idol
> soaking up the ceremonial urban fluids of exhaust and pidgeon crap;
> strengthened not diminished by them.
Maybe that's why it looks like an overbaked brownie. It's trying to
tell me something.
>
>> Leonard Baskin
>
>
> Had to google him. I liked the animal pictures.
>
me the birds especially,... but also the vulnerable and existential
little men
but this is all very new and due in part to this whole African art thing
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