Thanks John for your appreciation! The program is released as freeware, and it's not restricted in functionality - it's exactly the same version that I have on my computer at home. The limits of the program (for now) are: -just one formula (with 2 editable parameters) -just one color palette! Despite this, so far I had hundreds of hours of fun with it. 8] The next versions will also have a *much* faster rendering. Oh yeah, there's another limit: the images rendered to disk are limited to 2 gibibyte, that is a little more than 2'147'000'000 pixels. ;] Please read the readme.txt file for correct installation info, and look at the program help (in PDF) for complete documentation. Have fun you all! Rick -----Original Message----- From: "John Wilson" <1stdiscus@gmail.com> Sent: 2014/8/4 19:45 To: "Fractint and General Fractals Discussion" <fractint@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Fractint] Fwd: Fractint, and Satan Fractal Fantastic. This old program downloaded and unzipped directly into a folder in my C: drive. In Windows 7 Pro. Moreover it's functional. I haven't read the manual yet, or checked the limits of functionality, but it draws fractals and screen position and zoom appear to work. On 4 August 2014 06:30, Rick Ostidich <rick@rickostidich.com> wrote:
Friends! I forward here the mail I sent yesterday to mr. Tim Wegner, as he suggested me to do. It's about the fractal program Satan.exe, that I just published as free-ware. Have fun you all!
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Good morning, mister Tim! This is Rick Ostidich, a computer programmer (machine language only!) from Italy. (I'm the author of the image viewer Ombra.exe for Dos, you probably remember about it!)
I'm happily using Fractint since 1995 (I still have release 19.2), and today for the first time I searched the Web for FractInt - it's great to see you're still on business!
The story is: one day, in 2003, I was playing with your "formula editor", and discovered a very interesting combination (sqrt+cosx), from which I created hundreds of beautiful and funny images. I named that formula "Satan", because there are a lot of evil monsters in it! (Mathematically speaking.) ;]
Then, on 2006, I wrote the simple program Satan.exe that lets you use your mouse to zoom and move (in 4-dimensions) in real-time within the fractal landscape, and render any image to disk bitmaps, in whatever resolution. I also added some other features, and wrote a long documentation. Soon after that, I moved to other projects, and I left the program unpublished. (Though, in all of these years, I use it a lot every month, and always discover new stuff.)
Few days ago I finally decided to publish it, as I should do with a lot of other programs of mine. Of course it's all released as free-ware, with no limitation. I don't want to make any money out of it. I got money. And also got admiration. (quote) ;] What I want is that other people enjoy the work that I've done for myself, and for the Science.
So, last Friday, I created the facebook page "Satan fractal" ( http://www.facebook.com/SatanFractal), where I posted 200 example pictures, and I've put a link to directly download the program from my personal site. (I'm building my site right now, but the Satan052.zip is already available in there.) The .zip file includes the program, the documentation, and 1'183 (!) images ready to render. All in a single Zip of 355 kilobytes ;]
In that documentation I wrote a lot about FractInt, giving all the credits and thanks that you deserve.
Currently, I'm not trying in any way to advertise my program - I didn't even ask my facebook friends to click 'like' on its page. But probably, it could deserve some attention from other fractal enthusiasts.
At the times of my Ombra.exe (1995, too) it was easy: I just uploaded the program to x2ftp.oulu.fi, and that was all. This meant thousands of downloads every week, and even a letter from NASA that asked me permission to use Ombra for their activities. 8] Nowadays I don't even know where and how one should publish his/her works. I spend too much time in programming or going out for fun, and too little time is left for navigating the web. ;]
Whom should I speak with, about this work that I've done? The first thing that came to my mind was "Fractint people"! So, here is this long email. (Sorry!) ;]
In short: take a look at it, if you have the time and the will to do so. And, possibly, tell your friends you've found something new, and free!
Thanks again, to you and to everyone at Stone Soup Group, and have a nice day! *Rick Ostidich*
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