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OK, first person to figure out *what on earth* I've got POV-Ray to
render here will get... uh... my respect. ;-)
Perhaps not as difficult as Andrew's, but it was more or less the
reaction of some of my collegues when I put this up on a poster
session in a scientific conference (biomedical engineering and
medical physics). Well, it was a *poster* session, wasn't it?
Never had so much questions about a poster before. I normally
try to be as clear as possible.
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Attachments:
Download 'image.png' (338 KB)
Preview of image 'image.png'
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andrel spake:
> OK, first person to figure out *what on earth* I've got POV-Ray to
> render here will get... uh... my respect. ;-)
>
> Perhaps not as difficult as Andrew's, but it was more or less the
> reaction of some of my collegues when I put this up on a poster
> session in a scientific conference (biomedical engineering and
> medical physics). Well, it was a *poster* session, wasn't it?
> Never had so much questions about a poster before. I normally
> try to be as clear as possible.
Erm - too bottles in a vase, bound with silver filligeree with a touch of
yellow and green glass?
--
Stefan Viljoen
Software Support Technician / Programmer
Polar Design Solutions
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andrel wrote:
> OK, first person to figure out *what on earth* I've got POV-Ray to
> render here will get... uh... my respect. ;-)
>
> Perhaps not as difficult as Andrew's, but it was more or less the
> reaction of some of my collegues when I put this up on a poster
> session in a scientific conference (biomedical engineering and
> medical physics). Well, it was a *poster* session, wasn't it?
> Never had so much questions about a poster before. I normally
> try to be as clear as possible.
Umm... something to do with cellular machinery?
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> OK, first person to figure out *what on earth* I've got POV-Ray to
> render here will get... uh... my respect. ;-)
>
> Perhaps not as difficult as Andrew's, but it was more or less the
> reaction of some of my collegues when I put this up on a poster
> session in a scientific conference (biomedical engineering and
> medical physics). Well, it was a *poster* session, wasn't it?
> Never had so much questions about a poster before. I normally
> try to be as clear as possible.
The bits of string tied round everything seem to be isotherms or
something similar. Have the flask things been heated and then inserted
into a bowl of water?
--
Stop the infinite loop, I want to get off! http://surreal.istic.org/
Paraphernalia/Never hides your broken bones,/ And I don't know why you'd
want to try:/ It's plain to see you're on your own. -- Paul Simon
The documentation that can be written is not the true documentation.
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Daniel Hulme wrote:
>>OK, first person to figure out *what on earth* I've got POV-Ray to
>>render here will get... uh... my respect. ;-)
>>
>>Perhaps not as difficult as Andrew's, but it was more or less the
>>reaction of some of my collegues when I put this up on a poster
>>session in a scientific conference (biomedical engineering and
>>medical physics). Well, it was a *poster* session, wasn't it?
>>Never had so much questions about a poster before. I normally
>>try to be as clear as possible.
>
>
> The bits of string tied round everything seem to be isotherms or
> something similar. Have the flask things been heated and then inserted
> into a bowl of water?
>
No, you, Stefan, and Thomas have missed the 'Medical' context.
As we are all regulars in off-topic, I though this one would
have been easy.
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> > The bits of string tied round everything seem to be isotherms or
> > something similar. Have the flask things been heated and then
> > inserted into a bowl of water?
> No, you, Stefan, and Thomas have missed the 'Medical' context.
But am I along the right lines? They are iso-somethings, right?
> As we are all regulars in off-topic, I though this one would
> have been easy.
It's a graph of civilian casualties in Iraq! Or a prop from Thief. Or it
depicts the plot holes in films. Ah, I give up.
--
Stop the infinite loop, I want to get off! http://surreal.istic.org/
Paraphernalia/Never hides your broken bones,/ And I don't know why you'd
want to try:/ It's plain to see you're on your own. -- Paul Simon
The documentation that can be written is not the true documentation.
Post a reply to this message
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Among other things, Daniel Hulme saw fit to write:
> The bits of string tied round everything seem to be isotherms or
> something similar. Have the flask things been heated and then inserted
> into a bowl of water?
Yes, but... a knot?
--
light_source{9+9*x,1}camera{orthographic look_at(1-y)/4angle 30location
9/4-z*4}light_source{-9*z,1}union{box{.9-z.1+x clipped_by{plane{2+y-4*x
0}}}box{z-y-.1.1+z}box{-.1.1+x}box{.1z-.1}pigment{rgb<.8.2,1>}}//Jellby
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On Sun, 07 Aug 2005 11:49:22 +0200, andrel <a_l### [at] hotmailcom>
wrote:
>No, you, Stefan, and Thomas have missed the 'Medical' context.
>As we are all regulars in off-topic, I though this one would
>have been easy.
The Association for Computational Linguistics is taking the p*ss :-)
Regards
Stephen
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Daniel Hulme wrote:
>>>The bits of string tied round everything seem to be isotherms or
>>>something similar. Have the flask things been heated and then
>>>inserted into a bowl of water?
>
>
>>No, you, Stefan, and Thomas have missed the 'Medical' context.
>
> But am I along the right lines? They are iso-somethings, right?
Yes they are
>
>>As we are all regulars in off-topic, I though this one would
>>have been easy.
>
> It's a graph of civilian casualties in Iraq! Or a prop from Thief. Or it
> depicts the plot holes in films. Ah, I give up.
>
Post a reply to this message
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Jellby wrote:
> Among other things, Daniel Hulme saw fit to write:
>
>
>>The bits of string tied round everything seem to be isotherms or
>>something similar. Have the flask things been heated and then inserted
>>into a bowl of water?
>
>
> Yes, but... a knot?
>
A bit of an artistic licence ;)
Yet with some serious background. Most people use iso-thingies
because everybody else uses them. A knot surprises them enough
to start a discussion on the limitations of this representation.
This image is a (small) figure in a paper that is more or less
accepted for publication now, without the knot. Perhaps we try
to get it on the cover with.
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