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sorry for being a little Anti-Povray, but its a lot easier to work with 3d
studio max
and then convert it into povray.
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Eitan Tal wrote:
>
> sorry for being a little Anti-Povray, but its a lot easier to work with 3d
> studio max
> and then convert it into povray.
Pov-Ray is free. I could by a good used car for the price of 3D studio max.
Simple economics makes Pov-Ray much more attractive for many people and it's
output is comparable if not better in many circumstances.
Next question.
--
Ken Tyler
mailto://tylereng@pacbell.net
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On Mon, 12 Jul 1999 00:58:21 +0200, "Eitan Tal" <eit### [at] netvisionnetil>
wrote:
> [..]and then convert it into povray.
You have verified what many other people have discovered - that the
raytraced output of freeware POV-Ray can be superior to high-dollar
commercial software. Thank you for this revelation.
--
Alan
--------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.povray.org - Home of the Persistence of Vision Ray Tracer
news.povray.org - where POV-Ray enthusiasts around the world can get
together to exchange ideas, information, and experiences with others
--------------------------------------------------------------------
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why in the world would you convert to pov if you can afford 3DSMAX?
doesn't that kinda defeat the purpose of using a $4k dollar program?
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A couple reason for me: I write html, in note pad.. I do big pages like
that. I learn the language that way. That is good because html is almost
universal.
Pov-ray isn't universal, no but it is like html. You type it out and get a
3d image (html you get 2d)
It is great that PovRAy is free. Now I don't really care about the fact
that 3dstudio Max is more expensive, therefor making this program better,
no because if I wanted to I could go out and get 3dstudio Max by just
downloading it, or Light wave, or Bryce 3d, or adobe PhotoShop or any other
expensive graphics program.
What makes Pov-Ray really great is that because it is free, there are so
many more people on the internet willing to help and talk about it.
Pov-Ray has it's own community. People like those on this newsgroup. And
that just plain out ROCKS!.
That's why I choose Pov-Ray, because it is great and the people are great!
You won't find much better any where else.. :)
Eitan Tal <eit### [at] netvisionnetil> wrote in message
news:37891471@news.povray.org...
> sorry for being a little Anti-Povray, but its a lot easier to work with 3d
> studio max
> and then convert it into povray.
>
>
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Eitan Tal wrote:
> sorry for being a little Anti-Povray, but its a lot easier to work with 3d
> studio max
> and then convert it into povray.
POV-Ray is not a modeler; it is a ray tracer. It is very good at what
it does: converting text input files into 2-D graphics output files.
Other programs can be used to generate text input files for POV-Ray, and
that's part of what makes POV-Ray useful. The chief usefulness of
POV-Ray - or any ray tracer - is the quality of the output it produces.
If you don't care so much about image quality, you may well want to go
with a faster method than ray tracing, regardless of your budget. If
you need the combination of modeler and high-quality renderer, it makes
sense to use an external modeler (3DS & whatever conversion software,
Moray, YourFavoriteTextEditor & graph paper, whatever) to create files
for use by POV-Ray. POV-Ray makes no claims of being a Swiss Army
knife. If you complain that POV-Ray isn't a modeler, you're right.
POV-Ray has other advantages over some other software (cost, access to
source code, cross-platform nature). That can't be said of most
modelers, with the possible exception of YourFavoriteTextEditor. Since
most modelers are not cross-platform (as they generally depend heavily
on platform-specific graphics libraries), it makes sense to have the
modelers vary with platform but have a unified cross-platform back end.
If you create a scene file for the IRTC using Moray and POV-Ray, other
people on PPC Mac's or SPARC's can render your file. That's not true of
most modelers, except when their output can be converted to POV-Ray
format. ;-)
Has anyone released a modified version of 3DS that will run on
clusters? Ray tracing as an algorithm is well suited to parallel
architecture. Modelers can better use pipelined graphics hardware that
POV-Ray can't. Yet another reason to separate renderers and modelers.
If you want a modeler that shares the advantages of POV-Ray of cost,
access to source code, and cross-platform nature (pick as many of those
as you like to consider important), you might offer to help with any one
of the ongoing 3-D modeler projects out there. I'm sure Ken has some
links. ;-)
--
Mark Gordon
mtg### [at] povrayorg
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Mark Gordon wrote:
> If you want a modeler that shares the advantages of POV-Ray of cost,
> access to source code, and cross-platform nature (pick as many of those
> as you like to consider important), you might offer to help with any one
> of the ongoing 3-D modeler projects out there. I'm sure Ken has some
> links. ;-)
>
> --
> Mark Gordon
> mtg### [at] povrayorg
I do indeed in the under development section of my links collection. Many
of those projects are searching for more contributors.
--
Ken Tyler
mailto://tylereng@pacbell.net
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Ken wrote:
> Eitan Tal wrote:
> > sorry for being a little Anti-Povray, but its a lot easier to work with 3d
> > studio max and then convert it into povray.
> Pov-Ray is free. I could by a good used car for the price of 3D studio max.
> Simple economics makes Pov-Ray much more attractive for many people and it's
> output is comparable if not better in many circumstances.
> Next question.
But lets be honest about it. If one acquires a good used car in
the manner most people have acquired 3DStudio it can usually be
plea-bargained down to a Class A misdemeanor for a first offense.
--
<blink>-------please--don't-----------------</blink>
http://www.giwersworld.org/artii/
http://www.giwersworld.org/artiii/
Finally up on 99/06/22 updated 06/30
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Eitan Tal wrote:
> sorry for being a little Anti-Povray, but its a lot easier to work with 3d
> studio max
> and then convert it into povray.
So why did you pay $4000 for it?
Is their a receipt in the audience?
--
<blink>-------please--don't-----------------</blink>
http://www.giwersworld.org/artii/
http://www.giwersworld.org/artiii/
Finally up on 99/06/22 updated 06/30
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As someone already answered, you are a little bit confused.
It's like saying "why do you use paper when it's much more easy to write
with a pencil?". It doesn't make sense.
They are different tools. You can write _with_ a pencil and you can
write _on_ paper. You can't write _with_ a paper or _on_ a pencil (well,
strictly speaking you can, but it's not very normal...).
You can't compare 3DStudio and POV-Ray as a modeller because POV-Ray is
not a modeller. It's like comparing the pencil and the paper as an instrument
which is used to write.
If you had compared, for example, 3DStudio and Moray, that would have been
more reasonable.
--
main(i,_){for(_?--i,main(i+2,"FhhQHFIJD|FQTITFN]zRFHhhTBFHhhTBFysdB"[i]
):5;i&&_>1;printf("%s",_-70?_&1?"[]":" ":(_=0,"\n")),_/=2);} /*- Warp -*/
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