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Am 22.07.2017 um 11:05 schrieb Stephen:
> On 7/21/2017 7:41 PM, MichaelJF wrote:
>> Sorry for the short notice, but I'm running for the German parliament
>> until the
>> September election.
>
> Good luck with it.
>
>> I and my party have no chance to win, but we will use it;)
>
> My sort of politician. ;)
Unfortunately I can't vote for him -- different voting district, if I'm
not mistaken.
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clipka <ano### [at] anonymousorg> wrote:
> Am 22.07.2017 um 11:05 schrieb Stephen:
> > On 7/21/2017 7:41 PM, MichaelJF wrote:
> >> Sorry for the short notice, but I'm running for the German parliament
> >> until the
> >> September election.
> >
> > Good luck with it.
> >
> >> I and my party have no chance to win, but we will use it;)
> >
> > My sort of politician. ;)
>
> Unfortunately I can't vote for him -- different voting district, if I'm
> not mistaken.
Many thanks, but unfortunately you're right. As usual...
Best regards,
Michael
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http://www.hib-wien.at/leute/wurban/informatik/POV/supershapes/Spherical4.html
Ari may be especially interested in this one:
http://www.hib-wien.at/leute/wurban/informatik/osculating/index.html
http://www.hib-wien.at/leute/wurban/informatik/apollonius/index.html
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"Fracplanet is an interactive tool for creating random fractal planets and
terrain areas with oceans, rivers, lakes and icecaps. The results can be
exported as models to POV-Ray and to Blender, or as texture maps for more
general usage. The code is licensed under the GPL. It uses Qt and OpenGL."
http://orbittrap.ca/?m=201302
https://sourceforge.net/projects/fracplanet/
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https://groimp.wordpress.com/groimp/
"GroIMP (Growth Grammar-related Interactive Modelling Platform) is a
3D-modelling platform. GroIMP contains modeling features such as:
Interactive editing of scenes
Rich set of 3D objects, including primitives, NURBS curves and surfaces, and
height fields
Material options like colors, and textures
Real-time rendering using OpenGL
Export to POV-Ray, a free ray-tracer
....."
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This seems to have some interesting scenes and animations with pov source and
ini files.
http://phys23p.sl.psu.edu/phys_anim/povray/
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https://quantumwise.com/products/item/426-atk-13-8-released
Simulation software for nanoscience
There is also an update to the POVRay plugin for generating ray-traced images
https://sourceforge.net/projects/scpovplot3d/
Here are PovRay(TM) templates for creating amazing 3D plots (histogram, surface,
box&whisker). These are macros in PovRay Scene Description Language (SDL), you
have to #include into Your scene, manually or by PovEdit Menu System. Nice
renderings!
https://sourceforge.net/projects/scpovplot3d/files/latest/download
For anyone fortunate enough to have a copy of Mathematica:
https://mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/72899/mathematica-and-pov-ray-workflow-qa
https://github.com/xslittlegrass/POVRayRender-For-Mathematica
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Hundreds of videos, millions of views, one professor
http://news.psu.edu/story/481673/2017/09/11/academics/hundreds-videos-millions-views-one-professor
physics at Penn State Schuylkill, with simple animated GIFs. Self-taught and
resourceful, he uses an open source license and a free software program,
POV-Ray, to generate single frames of animations, which he then sews together
into a video. Often these type of videos are generated by an entire team of
graphic designers and animators for large companies, not one professor."
http://phys23p.sl.psu.edu/phys_anim/Phys_anim.htm
https://www.youtube.com/mrg3
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On 10/17/2017 07:52 AM, Bald Eagle wrote:
> Hundreds of videos, millions of views, one professor
>
>
http://news.psu.edu/story/481673/2017/09/11/academics/hundreds-videos-millions-views-one-professor
>
> "It all began in the early ‘90s for Michael Gallis, associate professor of
> physics at Penn State Schuylkill, with simple animated GIFs. Self-taught and
> resourceful, he uses an open source license and a free software program,
> POV-Ray, to generate single frames of animations, which he then sews together
> into a video. Often these type of videos are generated by an entire team of
> graphic designers and animators for large companies, not one professor."
>
> http://phys23p.sl.psu.edu/phys_anim/Phys_anim.htm
> https://www.youtube.com/mrg3
>
>
Thanks! Cool stuff and the links are new to me. Bill P.
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https://www.southampton.ac.uk/~fangohr/gallery/gallery.html
A little bit of POV-Ray on that page, and some interesting looking images - I
haven't delved into the other pages to see what's there yet.
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