5th October 1993 Eorbit is a 360 frame fli of the earth rotating at 23.5 degrees to the ecliptic seen from an elliptical orbit that varies between 20,000 miles and 40,000 miles. The earth's surface features are accurately modelled to 0.5 degree resolution using a 720x360 height field for slight bump mapping and another image for colour coded altitude contours. The sea varies from light blue to dark blue to black, and the land varies from green to brown to grey to white. The Atlantic ridge is clearly visible as are the Himalayas and lots of other features. The sun pops in every now and then featuring some camera flare, (an image map) and the moon is just visible in a couple of frames, (but you have to look hard for it as it moves against the background of stars! For the anoraks... Created by Andy Haveland-Robinson using Qbasic and the registered version of Vivid2, plus height field data obtainable from ftp.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de [134.106.1.9] in /pub/dkbtrace/pics/earth.lzh The image data was modified to sort and change palette mapping, then converted to 24 bit targas for image mapping. Thanks go to Frank.Neumann@arbi.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de for making the raw images from the floating point data at hanauma.stanford.edu, Eric Haines of Raytracing News, and to Ken Chin-Purcell for writing the article publicising its availibility. Enjoy... Andy. +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Haveland-Robinson Associates | Email: andy@osea.demon.co.uk | | 54 Greenfield Road, London | ahaveland@cix.compulink.co.uk | | N15 5EP England. 081-800 1708 | Also: 0621-88756 081-802 4502 | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ > Some dream of doing great things, while others stay awake and do them <