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Same height field as before, this time with lava. Turn up the AC, will
you?
--
H.E. Day
<><
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'sky2.jpg' (29 KB)
Preview of image 'sky2.jpg'
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"H. E. Day" wrote:
>
> Same height field as before, this time with lava. Turn up the AC, will
> you?
Hot stuff H.E.! Looks suitable for a Sci-Fi book cover.
--
Ken Tyler - 1400+ POV-Ray, Graphics, 3D Rendering, and Raytracing Links:
http://home.pacbell.net/tylereng/index.html http://www.povray.org/links/
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Ken wrote:
> Hot stuff H.E.!
yuk yuk
--
David Fontaine <dav### [at] faricynet> ICQ 55354965
My raytracing gallery: http://davidf.faricy.net/
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Yup.
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Looks like a cover of a Perry Rhodan book. But to be honest, I prefer
the last version with greens and those 'towers'.
Karl
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On 2 Oct 2000 20:54:30 -0400, H. E. Day wrote:
>Same height field as before, this time with lava. Turn up the AC, will
>you?
Presumably you used soem MegaPov post processing on this. Looks great.
--
Cheers
Steve email mailto:ste### [at] zeroppsuklinuxnet
%HAV-A-NICEDAY Error not enough coffee 0 pps.
web http://www.zeropps.uklinux.net/
or http://start.at/zero-pps
12:37pm up 4 days, 14:57, 2 users, load average: 2.06, 2.11, 2.52
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in povray.binaries.images, H. E. Day says...
> Same height field as before, this time with lava. Turn up the AC, will
> you?
>
>
What is the AC? Alternating Current?
BTW this image gives me the shivers! I suppose the sharp peaks fall down
incessantly? That should be a sight... :) It also makes me think of what
I once heard about the Deccan Traps in India
(http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/volc_images/southeast_asia/india/dec
can.html). No fiercer sight must have been shown on inhabited earth,
ever, it seems.
--
Regards, Sander
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On Tue, 3 Oct 2000 21:37:30 +0200, Sander wrote...
> in povray.binaries.images, H. E. Day says...
> > Same height field as before, this time with lava. Turn up the AC, will
> > you?
> >
> >
> What is the AC? Alternating Current?
Maybe Mr. Day is also an experimental AI system. If so, then Uncle Ken
has Company :)
> BTW this image gives me the shivers! I suppose the sharp peaks fall down
> incessantly? That should be a sight... :) It also makes me think of what
> I once heard about the Deccan Traps in India
> (http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/volc_images/southeast_asia/india/dec
> can.html). No fiercer sight must have been shown on inhabited earth,
> ever, it seems.
Yeah, I was thinking it looked a bit like a flood basalt might have.
IIRC, there's a bigger flood basalt than the Deccan Traps in Siberia, but
it's been pretty much weathered down.
Bye for now,
Jamie.
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Yeah, I get the thought too of some SF book illustration when I see his
stuff. On top of that whenever I see that moniker of his, I think he
must be a writer too!
Abe
Ken wrote:
>
> Hot stuff H.E.! Looks suitable for a Sci-Fi book cover.
>
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Air Conditioning. Duh.
:)
H.E. Day
<><
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