The Galactic Core

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Chuft-Captain
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The Galactic Core

Post #1by Chuft-Captain » 04.03.2008, 10:32

Image

:lol:
Last edited by Chuft-Captain on 21.03.2008, 06:00, edited 2 times in total.
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
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Reiko
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Post #2by Reiko » 04.03.2008, 10:56

It's a bunch of stars!

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Post #3by Chuft-Captain » 04.03.2008, 11:22

Not just any stars though...

Image

:lol:
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)

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Tuefish
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Post #4by Tuefish » 04.03.2008, 11:29

what am I looking at here?
"Over Seventy earths spinnin' round in the galaxy, and the meek have inherited not a one."
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duds26
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Post #5by duds26 » 04.03.2008, 16:31

A couple of stars which could have planets, are you going to make some systems wit planets and moons??
Last edited by duds26 on 15.04.2018, 21:06, edited 1 time in total.

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Post #6by Chuft-Captain » 04.03.2008, 18:37

Image
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)

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buggs_moran
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Post #7by buggs_moran » 04.03.2008, 20:36

globular cluster?
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Post #8by Chuft-Captain » 04.03.2008, 21:56

"Gone were the obscuring masses of dust and gas. A billion years ago they must have been swept up for fuel by the hungry, crowded stars.
_______ lay before me like a great jeweled sphere. I'd expected it to be a gradual thing,....there was nothing gradual about it.....The red stars were the biggest and brightest. I could actually pick some of them out as individuals. The rest was a finger painting in flourescent green and blue....It was all so bright.
I'll show you how bright it was.
Is it night where you are? Step outside and look at the stars. What color are they? Antares may show red, if you're near enough; in the system, so will Mars. Sirius may show blueish. But all the rest are white pinpoints.
Why? Because it's dark. Your day-vision is in color, but at night you see in black-and-white, like a dog.
______ suns were bright enough for color vision."


Image
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)

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Tuefish
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Post #9by Tuefish » 05.03.2008, 06:16

A realistic distance to color ratio?
"Over Seventy earths spinnin' round in the galaxy, and the meek have inherited not a one."

-Malcolm Reynolds

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Post #10by Reiko » 05.03.2008, 06:22

buggs_moran wrote:globular cluster?
If in future versions the 16,000ly limit is overcome, it would be beyond cool to make a halo of those around the milky way. :)


Chuft-Captain wrote:
"Gone were the obscuring masses of dust and gas. A billion years ago they must have been swept up for fuel by the hungry, crowded stars.
_______ lay before me like a great jeweled sphere. I'd expected it to be a gradual thing,....there was nothing gradual about it.....The red stars were the biggest and brightest. I could actually pick some of them out as individuals. The rest was a finger painting in flourescent green and blue....It was all so bright.
I'll show you how bright it was.
Is it night where you are? Step outside and look at the stars. What color are they? Antares may show red, if you're near enough; in the system, so will Mars. Sirius may show blueish. But all the rest are white pinpoints.
Why? Because it's dark. Your day-vision is in color, but at night you see in black-and-white, like a dog.
______ suns were bright enough for color vision."


Ah make all of the stars show in their proper color no matter how far away you view them?

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Post #11by Chuft-Captain » 05.03.2008, 08:24

Reiko wrote:Ah make all of the stars show in their proper color no matter how far away you view them?
Incorrect. :lol:

You need to fill in the missing words:
Chuft-Captain wrote:
"Gone were the obscuring masses of dust and gas. A billion years ago they must have been swept up for fuel by the hungry, crowded stars.
??? ???? lay before me like a great jeweled sphere. I'd expected it to be a gradual thing,....there was nothing gradual about it.....The red stars were the biggest and brightest. I could actually pick some of them out as individuals. The rest was a finger painting in flourescent green and blue....It was all so bright.
I'll show you how bright it was.
Is it night where you are? Step outside and look at the stars. What color are they? Antares may show red, if you're near enough; in the system, so will Mars. Sirius may show blueish. But all the rest are white pinpoints.
Why? Because it's dark. Your day-vision is in color, but at night you see in black-and-white, like a dog.
??? ???? suns were bright enough for color vision."



Another clue?...
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)

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Tuefish
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Post #12by Tuefish » 05.03.2008, 08:54

"Gone were the obscuring masses of dust and gas. A billion years ago they must have been swept up for fuel by the hungry, crowded stars.
the core lay before me like a great jeweled sphere. I'd expected it to be a gradual thing,....there was nothing gradual about it.....The red stars were the biggest and brightest. I could actually pick some of them out as individuals. The rest was a finger painting in flourescent green and blue....It was all so bright.
I'll show you how bright it was.
Is it night where you are? Step outside and look at the stars. What color are they? Antares may show red, if you're near enough; in the system, so will Mars. Sirius may show blueish. But all the rest are white pinpoints.
Why? Because it's dark. Your day-vision is in color, but at night you see in black-and-white, like a dog.
the core suns were bright enough for color vision."


The core?
"Over Seventy earths spinnin' round in the galaxy, and the meek have inherited not a one."

-Malcolm Reynolds

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Post #13by Chuft-Captain » 05.03.2008, 09:00

Tuefish wrote:The core?
Correct!

Reiko wrote:It's a bunch of stars!

Correct! :lol:

--- Click for VIDEO (5.5 MB) XVid

PS. The quote is from Larry Niven's short story "At The Core".
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)

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Fightspit
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Post #14by Fightspit » 05.03.2008, 12:48

I can't see anything in your movie even if I have got the Xvid plug-in and there is not sound.

Image
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Post #15by Chuft-Captain » 05.03.2008, 13:00

Fightspit wrote:I can't see anything in your movie even if I have got the Xvid plug-in and there is not sound.

Hmm,

That does look very much like a codec problem, or corrupted download. Are you sure you have the codec?
From your screenshot it looks like the progress bar is moving, but the picture is black. That suggests you downloaded the file OK -- How big is the downloaded file exactly. How long does it take for the progress bar to travel from left to right? -- The clip is 31 secs long.

I note that you're using VISTA. Maybe this has something to do with the problem.

Have you managed to play other Xvids in the past, on this machine?

I suggest:
1. Wait -- See if anyone else reports same problem.
2. If not, then first check the file size -- On my machine (Win-XP), it's 5,783,410 bytes (5,783,552 bytes on disk)
3. If not a corrupted or partial download then try re-installing the codec.

Hope this helps.
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)

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buggs_moran
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Post #16by buggs_moran » 05.03.2008, 13:13

Same problem, no vid.
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Cham M
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Post #17by Cham » 05.03.2008, 13:47

I'm able to see the video, and I'm on a Mac :P
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Post #18by t00fri » 05.03.2008, 14:17

This AVI format/codec is NOT recognized by default by the Win Media Player. Note there are many different formats ending with .avi ;-) People should start using the excellent free VLC player under Windows as well. It plays practically EVERYTHING and on ALL OS's!

F.
Image

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selden
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Post #19by selden » 05.03.2008, 14:25

It was shown fine by the older DivX codec, v5.2.1.
I then made the mistake up udating to the current version. I now see red diagonal streaks and then the codec crashes Windows Media Player.
Selden

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Post #20by Fightspit » 05.03.2008, 14:27

Oops :oops: I didn't think to use VLC to play the movie and it works ! thanks !

I have used WMP in my laptop (WindowsXp) and reinstall the latest Divx (include xvid plugin) codec but it doesn't work (black screen) :evil: .
Motherboard: Intel D975XBX2
Processor: Intel Core2 E6700 @ 3Ghz
Ram: Corsair 2 x 1GB DDR2 PC6400
Video Card: Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX 768MB GDDR3 384 bits PCI-Express 16x
HDD: Western Digital Raptor 150GB 10000 rpm
OS: Windows Vista Business 32 bits


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