EMAIL: rthomas@HiWAAY.net NAME: Robert Thomas TOPIC: Science Fiction COPYRIGHT: I SUBMIT TO THE STANDARD RAYTRACING COMPETITION COPYRIGHT. RENDERER USED: POV-Ray for Windows 3.0 TOOLS USED: Micrografx Photo Magic (format conversion) RENDER TIME: 4h 05m 56s HARDWARE USED: Pentium-120 IMAGE DESCRIPTION: "See the World From a Whole New Perspective: Affordable Luxury in Orbit!" That's what the ad said. Yeah, the view is nice, but if only you'd known. So you're just sitting down at your genuine woodtone plastic table, about to have a yummy glass of nutrient fortified orange flavored juicelike beverage product, when you feel an all-too-familiar lurch as all your internal organs suddenly shift slightly. Gravity's off. Again. Third time this month, but you suppose it could be worse. Could be hull breaches. This image comes right from the depths of my twisted soul. It isn't based in any previously existing fictional universe. DESCRIPTION OF HOW THIS IMAGE WAS CREATED: I created it all in the builtin editor, because I haven't found a modeller I like. I've seen some pretty nice results from POVLab, but haven't been able to give it a try myself. The planet is a set of three concentric spheres. The atmosphere is a halo. The clouds are a bozo with a transparent color map. The planet itself is a bozo between highly reflective water and relatively flat (finish) land. The land itself is a tan and green bozo, with normal bumps on it. The visible station exterior is mostly one big CSG, as is the little remote probe that shines spotlights on the station. The remote is actually an externally defined object, and is fairly detailed on its own, though much of the detail is lost at the small scale. On the main hull, the light gray tiles are somewhat more reflective than the dark gray tiles. This is an effect I have seen used effectively in other images of space structures, and I wanted to see how it would work here, though the viewing angle doesn't show it much. The room in which the viewer is floating is a box carved out of a plane, with a light source in the middle of the ceiling to simulate a realistic interior light. The window glass was a problem. There are supposed to be two panes, but the interreflections between the panes made the exterior view almost invisible, so I removed the thick outer one, but kind of hinted at its existence by putting a "drilled hole" with a bolt through it in the bottom right corner of the nonexistent window. Other than that, the stars are a small-scale bozo. The glass and handrail are CSGs (with a quilting pattern on the rail), and the blobs of juice are, well, blobs.