Don't know if this is fractal-based. Certainly looks that way, and I find it remarkable! http://inoyan.narod.ru/kaleidoskop.swf John W.
John W. <juanw@shaw.ca> wrote:
Don't know if this is fractal-based. Certainly looks that way, and I find it remarkable!
Nice find !!! :-) I like the way that one can somewhat control the image by moving the mouse pointer around in various ways. Making it faster or slower, going into the center or going out from it, or just rotating. Sincerely, P.N.L. -------------------------------------- http://www.Nahee.com/PNL/Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
Hi Paul, Nice to see your active again on the list and obviously well. ps I wonder how it was done? Alex Dukay
alex dukay wrote:
Hi Paul, Nice to see your active again on the list and obviously well.
Somewhat active, but definitely not well, just still existing for the moment. (I want to stay alive just long enough to see the end of human civilization.) :-)
I wonder how it was done?
Shockwave Flash files sure have come a long way since there initial creation, especially the action type that allow user manipulation. This particular one seems to be fairly popular based upon the number of references to it around the web. (It seems to have first been uploaded last year around May 06, 2010.) Sincerely, P.N.L. -------------------------------------- http://www.Nahee.com/PNL/Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
http://inoyan.narod.ru/kaleidoskop.swf I put it in my favourites. I facebooked it. She knows how to write loops. According to wikipedia, though, since it seems to contain no dense inner set (maybe it haz just been neatly excluded), it's not a fractal. Coulda fooled me, and it would not be the first time someone wrote a rule in mathematics that few people accept. Can you imajin what she wiL do with music visualization code (perhaps WinAMP)? _______ A soldier who survived mustard gas and pepper spray is now a seasoned veteran.
Well she seems to be comfortable, (at least) with music... Try http://inoyan.narod.ru/musicmatrix.swf John W. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jay Litwyn" <brewhaha@freenet.edmonton.ab.ca> To: "Fractint and General Fractals Discussion" <fractint@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Friday, July 01, 2011 11:55 AM Subject: Re: [Fractint] A Fractal?
http://inoyan.narod.ru/kaleidoskop.swf I put it in my favourites. I facebooked it. She knows how to write loops. According to wikipedia, though, since it seems to contain no dense inner set (maybe it haz just been neatly excluded), it's not a fractal. Coulda fooled me, and it would not be the first time someone wrote a rule in mathematics that few people accept. Can you imajin what she wiL do with music visualization code (perhaps WinAMP)?
I am not getting any audio from that link, and methinks that matrix is just a bit too large. I hav considered making music out of a sudoku, and I think timing would be most of the job, although such a thing az nine part harmony probably iz, and I wrote a restriction on the sudoku creation to help. I hav a project to create music directly out of my public keyprint. juanw@shaw.ca wrote:
Well she seems to be comfortable, (at least) with music... Try http://inoyan.narod.ru/musicmatrix.swf
John W.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Jay Litwyn" <brewhaha@freenet.edmonton.ab.ca> To: "Fractint and General Fractals Discussion" <fractint@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Friday, July 01, 2011 11:55 AM Subject: Re: [Fractint] A Fractal?
http://inoyan.narod.ru/kaleidoskop.swf I put it in my favourites. I facebooked it. She knows how to write loops. According to wikipedia, though, since it seems to contain no dense inner set (maybe it haz just been neatly excluded), it's not a fractal. Coulda fooled me, and it would not be the first time someone wrote a rule in mathematics that few people accept. Can you imajin what she wiL do with music visualization code (perhaps WinAMP)?
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Jay Litwyn wrote:
I am not getting any audio from that link, and methinks that matrix is just a bit too large.
John W. wrote:
How many of the squares did you click and activate ?? Sincerely, P.N.L. -------------------------------------- http://www.Nahee.com/PNL/Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
Paul N. Lee wrote:
Jay Litwyn wrote:
I am not getting any audio from that link, and methinks that matrix is just a bit too large.
John W. wrote:
How many of the squares did you click and activate ??
Ten. http://ecn.ab.ca/~brewhaha/Sound/egzit.mp3
Sincerely, P.N.L. -------------------------------------- http://www.Nahee.com/PNL/Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
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I work with atmospheric dynamics where large thermal upwellings (can be
100m) cause disturbances in the various layers of the atmosphere. These large disturbances create bands of turbulence where two layers move across each other. The turbulence is broken down into ever smaller disturbances according to a cascading power law ~L^-5/3 creating ever smaller disturbances until they reach a few mm and are dissipated as heat. Between the outer and inner scales, they are self-similar and can be considered a fractal population or distribution, i.e., if you look at any range of spatial frequencies between the two limits, the distribution of power in the various sizes of turbulence follows the same poser law. In the atmosphere's case, there are an infinite number of scales between the outer and inner scale.
I've always been partial to fractal clouds and using the law, you can make very realistic fractal clouds, because you are modeling the very nature of the clouds themselves. Marco
According to wikipedia, though, since it seems to contain no dense inner set (maybe it haz just been neatly excluded), it's not a fractal.
participants (5)
-
alex dukay -
Jay Litwyn -
juanw@shaw.ca -
Marc Reinig -
Paul N. Lee