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I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
programming PC's.
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'selectric5.jpg' (144 KB)
Preview of image 'selectric5.jpg'

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On 8/1/2025 7:11 PM, Clarence1898 wrote:
> I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
> 20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
> 90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
> to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
> little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
> programming PC's.
That is a nice variation on a theme.
Josh
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Hi(gh)!
On 02.08.25 04:11, Clarence1898 wrote:
> I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
> 20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
> 90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
> to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
> little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
> programming PC's.
When I read the subject, I first thought of ASCII art... such as the
physical maps based on early Landsat altimetry data I once saw in a
1970s issue of "Afghanistan Journal", just numeric characters (0 to 9)
for different altitude ranges and then manually(!) coloured...
I could very well imagine coding a rudimentary raytracer on my Commodore
64 and then print the rendered scenes as such ASCII graphics...
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
--
VBI BENE, IBI BACTRIA!
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hi,
"Clarence1898" <dle### [at] comcast net> wrote:
> I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
> 20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
> 90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
> to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
> little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
> programming PC's.
very nice. and the cards are punched :-).
(is the 1898 a jazz reference ?)
regards, jr.
Post a reply to this message
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"Clarence1898" <dle### [at] comcast net> wrote:
> I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
> 20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
> 90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
> to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
> little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
> programming PC's.
Nice scene!
I have cases of the paper in your scene. Got them from a office supply store
that closed down in the late 90's. Used to use the punch cards as book markers.
Have Fun
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Hi(gh)!
On 02.08.25 19:37, Leroy wrote:
> I have cases of the paper in your scene. Got them from a office supply store
> that closed down in the late 90's. Used to use the punch cards as book markers.
> Have Fun
>
When the Internet hit me first in 1995, Cologne University's computing
centre still used a DIN A1 chain printer... and, yes, there even were
some unused punchcards left! And it would be really nice to find a stack
of DIN A4 fan-fold paper for my Commodore MPS 801 printer... if I only
had some fresh ink ribbons for it! But who sells ink ribbons for a
40+-year old matrix printer?
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
Now crafting: lots of computers in Satisfactory!
--
VBI BENE, IBI BACTRIA!
Post a reply to this message
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"jr" <cre### [at] gmail com> wrote:
> hi,
>
> "Clarence1898" <dle### [at] comcast net> wrote:
> > I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
> > 20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
> > 90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
> > to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
> > little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
> > programming PC's.
>
> very nice. and the cards are punched :-).
>
>
> (is the 1898 a jazz reference ?)
>
>
> regards, jr.
Thank You. Of course the cards are punched. How else could I feed the program
to the computer. No, 1898 is not a reference to jazz. I grew up in the 50s and
60s, my taste in music runs more to classic rock and roll.
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"Leroy" <whe### [at] gmail com> wrote:
> "Clarence1898" <dle### [at] comcast net> wrote:
> > I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
> > 20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
> > 90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
> > to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
> > little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
> > programming PC's.
>
> Nice scene!
> I have cases of the paper in your scene. Got them from a office supply store
> that closed down in the late 90's. Used to use the punch cards as book markers.
> Have Fun
Thank You. I ran out of green bar paper a long time ago. I still have half a
box of punch cards left. Indeed they make great book markers.
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hi,
"Clarence1898" <dle### [at] comcast net> wrote:
> "jr" <cre### [at] gmail com> wrote:
> > ...
> Thank You. Of course the cards are punched. How else could I feed the program
> to the computer.
</grin>
> No, 1898 is not a reference to jazz. I grew up in the 50s and
> 60s, my taste in music runs more to classic rock and roll.
ah, ok, thanks. (about 10 years ahead of self, then :-))
in the reply to Leroy, you wrote: "I ran out of green bar paper a long time
ago". glad you did because I now (can) see what had "nagged" me re the image,
the solid colour bars. the (fan-fold) "green bar" I remember, and used, had six
(I think) thin, parallel green lines making each "bar". must be a
manufacturers' thing.
regards, jr.
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"Clarence1898" <dle### [at] comcast net> wrote:
> I was going through some old drives and found this one. I posted this probably
> 20 years ago as my obligatory first RSOCP. I came across Povray in the early
> 90s and have used it off and on ever since. I thought it might be interesting
> to see what programming Pov scenes would be like in the 1970's. Just for a
> little background, I've been a mainframe programmer since 1969, and now enjoy
> programming PC's.
Hi,
Did you render this on a current POV-Ray version (3.7 or 3.8b), and if so with
the proper version directive?
I love the concept, the visual ideas, and they read like a very nice picture...
So though I'm not used to that, it motivates me to use for the first time (and
maybe the last if it comes out too harsh) a very meanly well-intended sarcasm :
could you please use conserve_energy keyword with your metals, as they are
currently so blindingly bright that I can't see the picture ! ;-P
I wish Cousin Ricky's macros could be included in POV-Ray sources, so that the
default way of calling a metal would have all that hard-wired. because users
should be able to trust the defaults to not do that kind of thing. To sum it up
use fresnel, ior, conserve_energy and a sum of diffuse+specular+reflection below
1.(most clean and shiny metals should have very very low diffuse)
Seriously, nice hues and punched cards though, as I do see them!
Post a reply to this message
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