POV-Ray : Newsgroups : povray.advanced-users : You know you have been POVing too long Server Time
27 Nov 2024 00:44:02 EST (-0500)
  You know you have been POVing too long (Message 1 to 6 of 6)  
From: Matt Giuer
Subject: You know you have been POVing too long
Date: 21 Jun 1999 15:26:57
Message: <376E92A0.CFEA6B8E@giwersworld.org>
1) When you look at a tree and admire its realism. 

2) You look at everyday objects in terms of POV primitives. 

3) You look at everyday objects and wonder how they did that. 

4) You look at photographs and wonder what they would be like
rotated.

5) ... 

Join the POV-12 step program nearest you. You are not alone. 

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From: Lance Birch
Subject: Re: You know you have been POVing too long
Date: 21 Jun 1999 22:59:32
Message: <376efc14@news.povray.org>
I was wondering how long it would take until someone posted another lot of
these :)

--
Lance.


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From: Noah A
Subject: Re: You know you have been POVing too long
Date: 22 Jun 1999 00:42:06
Message: <376F1413.567657FA@powersurfr.com>
i think i've done all of thouse at some time :) and i do #2 and #4 all
the time :)

Matt Giuer wrote:

> 1) When you look at a tree and admire its realism.
>
> 2) You look at everyday objects in terms of POV primitives.
>
> 3) You look at everyday objects and wonder how they did that.
>
> 4) You look at photographs and wonder what they would be like
> rotated.
>
> 5) ...
>
> Join the POV-12 step program nearest you. You are not alone.
>
> --
> <blink>------------------------------------</blink>
> http://members.aol.com/jull43


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From: Mark Wagner
Subject: Re: You know you have been POVing too long
Date: 23 Jun 1999 00:04:49
Message: <37705ce1@news.povray.org>
Matt Giuer wrote in message <376E92A0.CFEA6B8E@giwersworld.org>...
>1) When you look at a tree and admire its realism.
>
>2) You look at everyday objects in terms of POV primitives.
>
>3) You look at everyday objects and wonder how they did that.
>
>4) You look at photographs and wonder what they would be like
>rotated.
>
>5) ...


When you start composing "you know you have been POVing too long..." lists

Mark


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From: Steve
Subject: Re: You know you have been POVing too long
Date: 23 Jun 1999 13:07:08
Message: <37711589.6952DEDE@puzzlecraft.com>
I always wonder what these message would look like using Hammer Fat over
a shiny T_Stone21 plane with area lighting?

steve

Matt Giuer wrote:

> 1) When you look at a tree and admire its realism.
>
> 2) You look at everyday objects in terms of POV primitives.
>
> 3) You look at everyday objects and wonder how they did that.
>
> 4) You look at photographs and wonder what they would be like
> rotated.
>
> 5) ...
>
> Join the POV-12 step program nearest you. You are not alone.
>
> --
> <blink>------------------------------------</blink>
> http://members.aol.com/jull43


Post a reply to this message

From: Michael Goldshteyn
Subject: Re: You know you have been POVing too long
Date: 21 May 2002 15:23:52
Message: <3cea9ec8$1@news.povray.org>
1. When your wife asks you what color dress she should wear and you reply:
"red 0.75 green 0.25 blue 0.75"
2. When you try to convince others it's Indigo, not Dark Blue!
3. When you comment, looking at the reflection of the sun in someone's
glasses, "Nice seculars!", and they think you are complementing them on
their glasses.
4. When you're sitting around drinking apple juice from a glass:
  a) Admiring the photons
  b) Wondering what the IOR of the glass is
  c) Wondering what the transparency of the juice is
  d) Considering how much easier the glass would have been to model if it
had only been a perfect cylinder
5. When you try to impress other by explaining to them that this cool,
complex, new rendered scene was all designed in your head and scripted
without any tools, by trial and error alone.
6. When you come up with yet another fun scene consisting of a plane and
intricately arranged (glass/metal/liquid) balls.
7. When you spend a week waiting for a scene to render, just to see if the
change in radiosity settings count from 200 to 400 made the lighting less
blotchy.

And, you really need serious help, when:

8. You're looking at a bagel, thinking x^4 + y^4 + z^4 + 2 x^2 y^2 + 2 x^2
z^2 + 2 y^2 z^2 - 2 (r0^2 + r1^2) x^2 + 2 (r0^2 - r1^2) y^2 - 2 (r0^2 +
r1^2) z^2 + (r0^2 - r1^2)^2 = 0, and wondering how much more perfect it
would be if only the baker used the sturmian root solver while shaping it.

"Matt Giuer" <mgi### [at] giwersworldorg> wrote in message
news:376E92A0.CFEA6B8E@giwersworld.org...
> ...


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