I also had a look and found only a couple or so of celestia images with verbose=ON. This is statistically
irrelevant as you should know. Some people might just be unaware how to switch the info off;-)
I for my part, never use the
verbose info, since I know very well that much of the given info has not yet been cross-checked. I never use info of any kind that I cannot rely on. I simply cannot afford to do this!
Don't forget Celestia is still young, but already exists for a number of platforms and the number of developers is quite small...Be assured, we get to that!
You don't take out/weaken features that people like with software, that's generally a bad design philosophy.
This may be a valid rule for producing commercial software. Celestia is NOT.
It's not a lack of knowing about the URL feature, it's that people want to use Celestia, not a web browser. If they wanted to use a web browser, they'd pull up a web browser and go straight to what they wanted. Often times, websites are slow (last night, I couldn't connect to nineplanets at all). They block your screen, which would otherwise be filled with beautiful Celestia views. They're inconvenient. There are dozens of reasons why that wouldn't be wanted.
Are you seriously denying that sophisticated software, notably commercial one, is mostly using WEB-browsers as the interface for their integrated help system?? If people would not like this, commercial firms would not use this interface in so many cases!
Also, displaying Celestia's internal information will be misleading to people. For example, consider the radius. What radius does it report for, say, Amalthea? Amalthea is not a sphere. Talking with people, I've determined that Celestia is supposed to use the maximum radius. How do people know this?
Minormoons.ssc, a popular addon, uses the average. If people interpret the radius of Amalthea as being real, it'll give a volume over 3 times higher than its real volume. BTW, any clue why the radii on solarsys.ssc are all smaller than those that NASA lists as the maximum, except for one which is larger than the max? In my last mail to Chris, I suggested that I make it so that we store the 3 axes' max dimensions, and then have getRadius return the max, and a new function - getRadii - return values for all of them, so that we can display all of them.
Rei, everyone would be very happy if you were ready to invest your time to work towards improvements of radius definitions for nonspherical bodies, eliminate further bugs in parameter values etc. Just to make Celestia more reliable..
But, please......., approach the problem more gently, take your time, think about how your modifications would fit into the general design goals of Celestia etc.
In no way will Celestia be transformed "within a few weeks" into a
spaceship simulator with which you can land on Olympus Mons to watch the sunset ....That's what is in your mind if I am correct?;-)
For example, would you like to join in our conversation about how, given the mass, orbit, and star details of an extrasolar planet, to get as realistic of a radius as possible, since the current gas giant formula doesn't accurately represent large gas giants or those in orbits close to stars? My last proposed formula was to use the distance from the star and its luminosity to approximate how much radiation the giant is getting, and use that as a logarithmic scalar (since heat can "inflate" gas giants) to a formula that approaches a radius of 80,000km as the mass of the gas giant approaches infinity. The whole formula would be curve-fit to match our solar system's giants and the known extrasolar radii. Certainly, without knowing how oblate the planet is, what it's chemical composition is like, and other factors, there's no way that we can be perfect. But we can do our best to be as close as possible, now can't we?
I would think that, given your background, you could contribute greatly to such a discussion.
Of course I could and others among us could as well. But some of us believe that it is a better policy to refer to globally accepted "standard data" rather than homebrewn ones, the errors of which are hard to assign...
Bye Fridger