Hi all.
First, pardon for my english, its not very good.
I really like Celestia and many thanks to everyone who contributed to Celestia.
Im not a space-nerd or anything, just find it very fascinating
Im using Debian Testing, got Celestia via apt-get install celestia-glut <- It got the least dependencies and I don't use KDE or Gnome.
I really need a manual in english or something, but the html manual is offline atm and I don't have support for ms-word.
I have some question I hope you guys can help me with:
1. Is it possible to label spacestation like the ISS? You know, pressing P shows Earth, Mars and such, pressing M shows the moons. Is there a similar function for spacestations?
2. I live in Denmark, small country in Europe. I really would like to zoom all the way in on Denmark, then look out in space, as if I was standing outside and looking up. That I can do, but the Earth rotates and the Follow and Track functions doesnt help me here. I wanna stay fixed on some landscape and lookout - is that possible?
Hope somebody can help me out.
Thank you.
Some few questions
Re: Some few questions
Newuser-guest wrote:Hi all.
First, pardon for my english, its not very good.
I really like Celestia and many thanks to everyone who contributed to Celestia.
Im not a space-nerd or anything, just find it very fascinating
I'm sorry, but that makes you a space-nerd!
Im using Debian Testing, got Celestia via apt-get install celestia-glut <- It got the least dependencies and I don't use KDE or Gnome.
I really need a manual in english or something, but the html manual is offline atm and I don't have support for ms-word.
The English HTML manual for v1.3.1 seems to be online at the moment. Try http://celestia.teyssier.org/doc/
OpenOffice is free for downloading and can read Word files. See http://www.openoffice.org/
Yes. Use N to select "spacecraft".I have some question I hope you guys can help me with:
1. Is it possible to label spacestation like the ISS? You know, pressing P shows Earth, Mars and such, pressing M shows the moons. Is there a similar function for spacestations?
Yes.2. I live in Denmark, small country in Europe. I really would like to zoom all the way in on Denmark, then look out in space, as if I was standing outside and looking up. That I can do, but the Earth rotates and the Follow and Track functions doesnt help me here. I wanna stay fixed on some landscape and lookout - is that possible?
Please read the "preliminary user's faq" in the Celestia Users Forum: Q/A #19.
http://www.shatters.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=21807&highlight=#21807
Hope somebody can help me out.
Thank you.
I hope this helps.
Selden
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Topic authorNewuser-guest
Re: Some few questions
I'm sorry, but that makes you a space-nerd!
Well, maybe just alitte
The English HTML manual for v1.3.1 seems to be online at the moment. Try http://celestia.teyssier.org/doc/
Thank you very much.
Please read the "preliminary user's faq" in the Celestia Users Forum: Q/A #19.
http://www.shatters.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=21807&highlight=#21807
Thats awesome! It works perfektly
I hope this helps.
It sure does. Thank you very much.
Best regards
Selden>
I got one last question.
I dunno what its called, I searched for 'panorama view' but don't think thats it.
When I use the Planetorium-function I can't see the hole sky. Only a little part of it, just in rea life when looking up.
But is there a function that gives me like a paorama view? So I can see the hole sky from my fixed position without using the mouse or the keyboard arrows?
I tried with the magnetude limit down to 6.21 and that gives me almost what I want. It still doesn't cover the hole sky.
Thanks again.
Best regards
I got one last question.
I dunno what its called, I searched for 'panorama view' but don't think thats it.
When I use the Planetorium-function I can't see the hole sky. Only a little part of it, just in rea life when looking up.
But is there a function that gives me like a paorama view? So I can see the hole sky from my fixed position without using the mouse or the keyboard arrows?
I tried with the magnetude limit down to 6.21 and that gives me almost what I want. It still doesn't cover the hole sky.
Thanks again.
Best regards