Paul N. Lee wrote:
Tadeus Z. (Ted, TeddyBear) wrote:
I have selected 15 tweaks of Jim's FOTD for 2009.03.15 and posted them to my Picasa album at: http://picasaweb.google.com/TeddyBear.GFX/UnderratedYouDecide#
I like several of the color palettes you chose for this fractal.
Just "Ted" will do I guess. I think that you are the first one who told me that someone likes any of these fractals. Thank you Paul.
If there is any interest, I have a Hi-Res (1280x1024) slideshow (Windows .EXE around 170-200MB in size, created with XnView, playable at other resolutions as well) of these (and other) tweaks.
I am interested in this file, but definitely NOT as an email attachment, nor as a bunch of small attachments. If there is some place to upload the file for FTP access, then that would be great.
I do not have an FTP box/account with 100MB+ storage available at the moment. Since no suggestion as to a preferred storage provider was made, I selected 4shared.com which worked fine for me in the past. The links are: http://www.4shared.com/file/94895231/33c91a58/OK_090315_random_Patriciapart1... http://www.4shared.com/file/94901076/836bb812/OK_090315_random_Patriciapart2... http://www.4shared.com/file/94906265/9d2a343e/OK_090315_random_Patriciapart3... The file sizes are roughly: 81MB, 81MB and 67MB (230MB after extracting the RAR archives). If anyone wants to, and has an online storage to host it as a single file, you are welcome to do so. The credits screen and the original FOTD rendering will appear at random during the slideshow, just like the rest of 600+ images (the info screen mentions only 400+). Each image is shown for 2 seconds, so the whole sequence would take about 20 minutes to watch. Each time when you start the slideshow the sequence of images is different (random), which might make the show more interesting. There are so many images because each one of different palettes had been rotated and several most interesting variants had been saved. Some images may seem to appear multiple times, but they are always slightly different parts of rotated sequences or might use a modified palette with some colours different. Binary duplicates had been eliminated from the pool. I DIDN'T remove less interesting variants, as it would require too much time to choose, and would reflect only a personal preference (I could have removed variants someone actually likes better than me). If you prefer a sequential version (which shows the images in order of creation), I could also provide it.
Sincerely, P.N.L. ------------------------------------------------- http://home.att.net/~Paul.N.Lee/PNL_Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
I hope you like the slideshow. Comments are welcome. Wishing you a nice day, Ted