Heh, it actually looks like an airbrush painting.Guitarplayer wrote:Looks crap, but hey, it's just a try. I've discovered that I can hook my camera up to my computer so that I can use it as a remote control for the shutter. So I took 31 pictures from -5 EV to +5 EV and assembled them (uncleaned and stuff) into a pretty crappy HDR.
Creativity of the day
Re: Creativity of the day
- Aurora Rossa
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Re: Creativity of the day
Just a short skit I was writing, parodying all those paranormal shows that play on the History Channel these days and its famous obsession with Hitler:
NARRATOR: Was the failed artist and later fascist dictator Adolf Hitler a monster? This question remains a source of fierce debate among historians and political commentators. In our quest to understand the truth behind the Adolf Hitler phenomenon, we have talked to believers and skeptics alike. We have interviewed first hand eye witnesses who claim to have actually seen Hitler in his natural habitat and examined reported physical evidence. We have also asked experts in zoology and other sciences to give us their take on the plausiblity of Hitler being a monster.
INTERVIEWER: As a professor emeritus with a PhD in primate zoology, what do you think of the claims surrounding Hitler and his purported monsterhood?
ARTHUR SCHOLTZ: In my estimation the evidence remains pretty thin and inconclusive. We just don't have enough substantial proof to definitively declare Adolf Hitler a monster. Until someone presents an actual physical body or at least some DNA samples, it behooves the scientific community to remain skeptical.
NARRATOR: Later we consulted conspiracy theorist Alex Beck, known for his popular AM radio show Freedom Report and his harsh allegations of fascist tendencies in the current administration.
ALEX BECK: I am fully convinced that Adolf Hitler was a monster. The evidence I've seen leads me to conclude he was a descendent of Homo Neanderthalensis or some other early hominid. It can hardly be a coincidence that the first neanderthal fossils turned up in Germany, the same place that Hitler just so happened to haunt for much of his life.
NARRATOR: Was the failed artist and later fascist dictator Adolf Hitler a monster? This question remains a source of fierce debate among historians and political commentators. In our quest to understand the truth behind the Adolf Hitler phenomenon, we have talked to believers and skeptics alike. We have interviewed first hand eye witnesses who claim to have actually seen Hitler in his natural habitat and examined reported physical evidence. We have also asked experts in zoology and other sciences to give us their take on the plausiblity of Hitler being a monster.
INTERVIEWER: As a professor emeritus with a PhD in primate zoology, what do you think of the claims surrounding Hitler and his purported monsterhood?
ARTHUR SCHOLTZ: In my estimation the evidence remains pretty thin and inconclusive. We just don't have enough substantial proof to definitively declare Adolf Hitler a monster. Until someone presents an actual physical body or at least some DNA samples, it behooves the scientific community to remain skeptical.
NARRATOR: Later we consulted conspiracy theorist Alex Beck, known for his popular AM radio show Freedom Report and his harsh allegations of fascist tendencies in the current administration.
ALEX BECK: I am fully convinced that Adolf Hitler was a monster. The evidence I've seen leads me to conclude he was a descendent of Homo Neanderthalensis or some other early hominid. It can hardly be a coincidence that the first neanderthal fossils turned up in Germany, the same place that Hitler just so happened to haunt for much of his life.

"There was a particular car I soon came to think of as distinctly St. Louis-ish: a gigantic white S.U.V. with a W. bumper sticker on it for George W. Bush."
Re: Creativity of the day
The problem with this kind of thing is that I can't tell whether you're making fun of yourself or being serious. I actually checked the post count to make sure it wasn't Xephyr-disguised-as-Eddy again.
It's (broadly) [faɪ.ˈjuw.lɛ]
#define FEMALE
ConlangDictionary 0.3 3/15/14 (ZBB thread)
Quis vult in terra stare,
Cum possit volitare?
#define FEMALE
ConlangDictionary 0.3 3/15/14 (ZBB thread)
Quis vult in terra stare,
Cum possit volitare?
- Aurora Rossa
- Smeric

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Re: Creativity of the day
I wasn't really making a statement about myself or being serious. I just wanted to poke some fun. No need to read so much into everything...faiuwle wrote:The problem with this kind of thing is that I can't tell whether you're making fun of yourself or being serious. I actually checked the post count to make sure it wasn't Xephyr-disguised-as-Eddy again.

"There was a particular car I soon came to think of as distinctly St. Louis-ish: a gigantic white S.U.V. with a W. bumper sticker on it for George W. Bush."
Re: Creativity of the day
I have created a logic-gate based computer language entitled Kumquat, which allows you to define extra logic gates using any number of input bits and output bits, in addition to built-in gates like NAND and XOR. The only thing left to implement is a sort of loop function-other. The following program adds two one-digit numbers (Kumquat only deals in binary) and prints the result.
program Kumquat
:
input["Enter first digit:", j];
input["Enter second digit:", k];
ADD[j, k, n];
print["The sum is:" + n];
new[ADD]
:
[i, i, o, o] //this defines the input-output format
(0, 0, 0, 0) //this is a truth table
(0, 1, 0, 1)
(1, 0, 0, 1)
(1, 1, 1, 0)
;
;
program Kumquat
:
input["Enter first digit:", j];
input["Enter second digit:", k];
ADD[j, k, n];
print["The sum is:" + n];
new[ADD]
:
[i, i, o, o] //this defines the input-output format
(0, 0, 0, 0) //this is a truth table
(0, 1, 0, 1)
(1, 0, 0, 1)
(1, 1, 1, 0)
;
;
Re: Creativity of the day
Stuff from high school








-
TomHChappell
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Salmoneus thinks this is vindictively offensive.
.
Last edited by TomHChappell on Fri Aug 12, 2011 12:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Creativity of the day
I do need to implement a loop function of some sort. I think it's Turing complete, but the experts (friends who are CS majors) are divided, and anyway without a loop function adding two numbers with an unspecified number of digits will be a nightmare.TomHChappell wrote:Cool! And creative.dhokarena56 wrote:I have created a logic-gate based computer language entitled Kumquat, which allows you to define extra logic gates using any number of input bits and output bits, in addition to built-in gates like NAND and XOR. The only thing left to implement is a sort of loop function-other. The following program adds two one-digit numbers (Kumquat only deals in binary) and prints the result.
program Kumquat
:
input["Enter first digit:", j];
input["Enter second digit:", k];
ADD[j, k, n];
print["The sum is:" + n];
new[ADD]
:
[i, i, o, o] //this defines the input-output format
(0, 0, 0, 0) //this is a truth table
(0, 1, 0, 1)
(1, 0, 0, 1)
(1, 1, 1, 0)
;
;
- vampireshark
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Re: Creativity of the day
Start of a short poem that is to be worked on over break. (Guess who it's about!)
Eșt une malheuruso barbațe
Ci nè podat sa jolissa para lèir vare.
Volet tozile lèir casu valetare
Per èt une paradișu lona lèir idère.
Eșt une malheuruso barbațe
Ci nè podat sa jolissa para lèir vare.
Volet tozile lèir casu valetare
Per èt une paradișu lona lèir idère.
what I, in English, wrote:There once was a miserable person
Oblivious to the beauty around him.
He always wished to leave his home
In search of paradise far, far away.
What do you see in the night?
In search ofvictims subjects to appear on banknotes. Inquire within.
In search of
- Aurora Rossa
- Smeric

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Re: Creativity of the day
Is this a dig at me? Because I was thinking of taking a camera to school so I could take some pictures of this "beauty".vampireshark wrote:(Guess who it's about!)

"There was a particular car I soon came to think of as distinctly St. Louis-ish: a gigantic white S.U.V. with a W. bumper sticker on it for George W. Bush."
- Yiuel Raumbesrairc
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Re: Creativity of the day
your stickart-fu is improving, monsieur Lachapelle
- Yiuel Raumbesrairc
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Re: Creativity of the day
I have been told that a good artist is not someone that makes good stuff, but someone that keeps on improving. Good thing then that I am (still) improving.Torco wrote:your stickart-fu is improving, monsieur Lachapelle
For the heck of it, here's all the artwork in one splash page.

And yes, his name is intentionally Xurnese, I believe I wrote his first name the right way with the syllabary.
"Ez amnar o amnar e cauč."
- Daneydzaus
- Daneydzaus
- Yiuel Raumbesrairc
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Re: Creativity of the day
For some contest, I did that while I was sick and bored at my parents' house :

(Clicking it will show you an enlarged version, for the details.)
I might win, then again I might not.

(Clicking it will show you an enlarged version, for the details.)
I might win, then again I might not.
"Ez amnar o amnar e cauč."
- Daneydzaus
- Daneydzaus
Re: Creativity of the day
^ Nice! Our snow has all gone. 
Re: Creativity of the day
I wrote a song for the Dwarf Fortress forums, who had a topic called "Dwarf Fortress: The Musical."
--------------------
The Fun Song
Shorast: It's been a long, long journey.
Urist: We've struck the earth too much.
Kol: We've filled our bins with treasure
Vucar: Of gold and bronze and such.
Shorast: We've engraved our halls with tales
Urist: Of burning elves and booze
Kol: By a paranoid engraver
Vucar: With a psychopathic Muse.
Shorast: And we've killed our foes with magma
Urist: And our nobles with bottomless pits.
Kol: We've built computers and pump stacks
Vucar: With the power of our wits.
Shorast: There are a thousand ways to die.
Urist: Like olms and trolls and troglodytes,
Kol: Forgotten beasts and elephants,
Vucar: And undead creatures of the night.
Shorast: But we survived them all, and yet,
Urist: Remembering the story of our kin,
Kol: Those olden dwarves inhabiting Boatmurdered,
Vucar: We knew eventually we'd be done in.
Shorast: But hark! upon this trumpet, let us charge!
Urist: The Fondled Gears into the demons ran!
Kol: And, as they dealt their slaughter, blow by blow,
Vucar: They held back Hell as only true dwarves can.
Shorast: But happiness will come unto the best;
Urist: The Happy Fun Stuff overtook them all;
Kol: And we remembered when the soldiers died
Vucar: There wasn't a protective wall.
Shorast: An emergency macedwarf named Fath,
Urist: Who'd married an axedwarf wild,
Kol: Gave birth while fighting a demon
Vucar: And defended its blows with her child.
Shorast: Alas, we were too late;
Urist: The fortress was overcome.
Kol: Our walls were covered with kitten blood,
Vucar: And a fire consumed all our barrels of rum.
Shorast: In short-
Urist: We struck the cotton candy
Kol: With no time left to run
Vucar: So we'll die with just one statement.
All: Just remember- LOSING IS FUN!
Exeunt, followed by the sound of tortured screaming backstage and the closing of the curtain.
Although the rhyme scheme is consistent, the meter isn't; I don't really feel like fixing it. I like what I've written.
--------------------
The Fun Song
Shorast: It's been a long, long journey.
Urist: We've struck the earth too much.
Kol: We've filled our bins with treasure
Vucar: Of gold and bronze and such.
Shorast: We've engraved our halls with tales
Urist: Of burning elves and booze
Kol: By a paranoid engraver
Vucar: With a psychopathic Muse.
Shorast: And we've killed our foes with magma
Urist: And our nobles with bottomless pits.
Kol: We've built computers and pump stacks
Vucar: With the power of our wits.
Shorast: There are a thousand ways to die.
Urist: Like olms and trolls and troglodytes,
Kol: Forgotten beasts and elephants,
Vucar: And undead creatures of the night.
Shorast: But we survived them all, and yet,
Urist: Remembering the story of our kin,
Kol: Those olden dwarves inhabiting Boatmurdered,
Vucar: We knew eventually we'd be done in.
Shorast: But hark! upon this trumpet, let us charge!
Urist: The Fondled Gears into the demons ran!
Kol: And, as they dealt their slaughter, blow by blow,
Vucar: They held back Hell as only true dwarves can.
Shorast: But happiness will come unto the best;
Urist: The Happy Fun Stuff overtook them all;
Kol: And we remembered when the soldiers died
Vucar: There wasn't a protective wall.
Shorast: An emergency macedwarf named Fath,
Urist: Who'd married an axedwarf wild,
Kol: Gave birth while fighting a demon
Vucar: And defended its blows with her child.
Shorast: Alas, we were too late;
Urist: The fortress was overcome.
Kol: Our walls were covered with kitten blood,
Vucar: And a fire consumed all our barrels of rum.
Shorast: In short-
Urist: We struck the cotton candy
Kol: With no time left to run
Vucar: So we'll die with just one statement.
All: Just remember- LOSING IS FUN!
Exeunt, followed by the sound of tortured screaming backstage and the closing of the curtain.
Although the rhyme scheme is consistent, the meter isn't; I don't really feel like fixing it. I like what I've written.
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TomHChappell
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Salmoneus thinks this is vindictively offensive.
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Last edited by TomHChappell on Fri Aug 12, 2011 12:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Christopher Schröder
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Re: Creativity of the day
I'd guess about how you fancy studying and living abroad, I suppose.vampireshark wrote:Start of a short poem that is to be worked on over break. (Guess who it's about!)
"Think only of the past as its remembrance gives you pleasure."
-Jane Austen, [i]Pride and Prejudice[/i]
-Jane Austen, [i]Pride and Prejudice[/i]
Re: Creativity of the day

Been working on improving the GDV layout. What goes on the back end really depends on mission parameters. Gonna have to build a simulator to determine a reasonable loadout of combat gear. Non-combat mission equipment is entirely another matter...
- vampireshark
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Re: Creativity of the day
Nope. I actually like (to an extent) where I live, but I just prefer being abroad more. If only they would stop deforesting the base...Christopher Schröder wrote:I'd guess about how you fancy studying and living abroad, I suppose.vampireshark wrote:Start of a short poem that is to be worked on over break. (Guess who it's about!)
What do you see in the night?
In search ofvictims subjects to appear on banknotes. Inquire within.
In search of
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TomHChappell
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Salmoneus thinks this is vindictively offensive.
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Last edited by TomHChappell on Fri Aug 12, 2011 12:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Creativity of the day
The General Deployment Vehicle (GDV) is a Strategic Space Command warship design intended to supersede the older Strategic Command Vehicle (SCV) and Logistics, Support, and Command Vehicle (LSCV) because of changes in overall war strategies. It represents a move toward decentralized warfare, where each GDV is tasked to operate independently of any Strategic Space Command resources outside of those carried on board the ship (which does include combat drones and a handful of other light craft).TomHChappell wrote:Looks cool!Goatface wrote:http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~sgmccabe/i ... DV_001.jpg
Been working on improving the GDV layout. What goes on the back end really depends on mission parameters. Gonna have to build a simulator to determine a reasonable loadout of combat gear. Non-combat mission equipment is entirely another matter...
What's a GDV?
The vessel shown is about 3800m in total length, which is quite a bit larger than I originally intended, but that seems to have been necessary.
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TomHChappell
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Salmoneus thinks this is vindictively offensive.
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Last edited by TomHChappell on Fri Aug 12, 2011 12:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Creativity of the day
*Today we are cancelling the Apocalypse*
Last edited by Izambri on Thu Nov 28, 2013 5:47 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Un llapis mai dibuixa sense una mà.



