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"SharkD" <mik### [at] gmailcom> wrote in message
news:4aa0d184$1@news.povray.org...
> Is radiosity a good thing in outdoor scenes, or is the benefit mainly in
> low-light situations, such as indoors?
I would say it has it's place in situations when something is partly in
shadows, or when you're trying to simulate "glooming" ... a very bright
outdoor scene maybe not.
Jim
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SharkD schrieb:
> Is radiosity a good thing in outdoor scenes, or is the benefit mainly in
> low-light situations, such as indoors?
Yes. :-)
Outdoor scenes could probably go with very low settings, even as low as
"half a bounce" [*], but even then it does make a difference.
[* by this I mean that a lot of computations could be left out even from
single-bounce radiosity, to produce an effect akin to ambient occlusion;
unfortunately that's a quality setting not available in POV-Ray at present.]
IMO (no H there ;-)) radiosity is an absolute /must/ for any indoor
scene trying for a realistic look.
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