Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!eru.mt.luth.se!news-stkh.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!news-paris.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!news-lond.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!dispatch.news.demon.net!demon!newsfeed.nacamar.de!news.nacamar.de!news.nacamar.de!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news-xfer.netaxs.com!news-xfer.mccc.edu!news.maxwell.syr.edu!news.bc.net!rover.ucs.ualberta.ca!news.ucalgary.ca!adilger From: adilger@enel.ucalgary.ca (Andreas Dilger) Newsgroups: comp.graphics.rendering.raytracing,comp.answers,news.answers Subject: comp.graphics.rendering.raytracing FAQ (part 1/2) Supersedes: Followup-To: comp.graphics.rendering.raytracing Date: 3 Mar 1997 11:00:52 GMT Organization: ECE Department, U. of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada Sender: adilger@enel.ucalgary.ca (Andreas Dilger) Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU Expires: 29 Mar 1997 11:00:02 GMT Message-ID: Reply-To: adilger@enel.ucalgary.ca NNTP-Posting-Host: adilger@munet-d.enel.ucalgary.ca Summary: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about raytracing software on comp.graphics.rendering.raytracing Keywords: FAQ ray tracing rendering Precedence: bulk Lines: 1156 Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.graphics.rendering.raytracing:20575 comp.answers:24634 news.answers:96124 Archive-name: graphics/raytrace-faq/part1 Last-modified: 1996/10/06 Posting-Frequency: every 10 days "But the Devil whoops, as he whooped of old: 'It's clever but is it art?'" Rudyard Kipling _The_Conundrum_of_the_Workshops_ This is the comp.graphics.rendering.raytracing Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) List. It's not the most definitive ray tracing reference you'll ever come across, but then, it was never meant to be. What it does set out to do is to answer some of the questions which keep cropping up on c.g.r.r and to give pointers to other references. It keeps the noise down on the group and we get to spend an extra 10 minutes in bed. This is a Good Thing. It was originally cobbled together by Andy Wardley, , from answers posted to c.g.r.r (actually from when it was c.g.r), from information people have supplied and from other existing ray tracing lists and references, most notably, Eric Haines' Ray Tracing News and other lists. Since the spring of 1995, I have taken over the maintenance of the FAQ. You may distribute this document to whoever, or wherever you like, as long as you keep the copyright message and give correct attributions for material used. This is just to stop nasty people with a substantial lack of moral fibre from taking the document and fobbing it off as their own. The FAQ belongs to the group, Andy just wrote it (and I update it). Lines with a '+' in the first column have been added recently, while lines with a '|' in the first column have been changed recently. If you think that parts of the FAQ are outdated, or need improvement, please feel free to send me your updates, and I will try to maintain and update it, as time permits. Authors of utilities should definitely send updated descriptions if they feel their tool has improved since this was written. The latest version of this FAQ is available via WWW at: http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/bngusenet/top.html under comp->graphics->rendering->raytracing. It is also available via anonymous ftp at: ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/graphics/raytrace-faq/ If you only have email, you can get it by sending email to: with both "send usenet/news.answers/graphics/raytrace-faq/part1" and "send usenet/news.answers/graphics/raytrace-faq/part2" in the body of the message (without the quotes). If you're only reading this document because your machine is locked up tracing, remember that all things come to those who wait. Andreas Dilger (C) Copyright 1994 Andy Wardley (C) Copyright 1995, 1996 Andreas Dilger ------------------------------ Subject: Table of Contents What is Ray Tracing? 1 - Ray Tracing Software 1.1 - POV-Ray 1.2 - Rayshade 1.3 - Radiance and ADELINE 1.4 - Blue Moon Rendering Tools (BMRT) 1.5 - Polyray 1.6 - Vivid (including BOB) 1.7 - Others 1.8 - Non-Ray Tracing Software 2 - FTP Sites, Web Sites, Bulletin Boards, etc. 2.1 - FTP Sites 2.2 - Bulletin Board Systems 2.3 - Mailing Lists 2.4 - Others 3 - Modelling Software 3.1 - SCED 3.2 - MORAY 3.3 - GUM 3.4 - Breeze Designer 3.5 - POVLAB 3.6 - Other Modellers 4 - Utilities and Other Software 4.1 - Image Display/Conversion Programs 4.2 - Format Conversion Utilities 4.3 - Creation Creators 4.4 - Texture Editors 4.5 - Animation 4.6 - Miscellaneous Utilities 5 - Further Information and Resources 5.1 - On-line Resources 5.2 - Other Newsgroups 5.3 - Books 5.4 - Image Libraries 5.5 - Texture Libraries 5.6 - Internet Ray Tracing Competition 6 - Frequently Asked Questions 6.1 - "Can I post binaries/images to this group?" 6.2 - "Where can I find model data for..." 6.3 - "How can I view these pictures?" 6.4 - "What's the difference between rendering and ray tracing?" 6.5 - "This picture doesn't trace." 6.6 - "I traced my picture, but I can't see anything." 6.7 - "I traced my picture, but the output is garbage." 6.8 - "What does this mean..." 6.9 - "Rotating/Scaling this object doesn't work properly." 6.10 - "Why is the Z axis is pointing the wrong way?" 6.11 - "Who is..." 7 - Roll The Credits... ------------------------------ Subject: What is Ray Tracing? Ray Tracing, in a one-line description, is a method that allows you to create stunning photo-realistic images on a computer. All you need is a computer, some ray tracing software, a little imagination and some patience. The first stage of creating this masterpiece is to "describe" what it is that you want to depict in your picture. You may do this using an interactive modelling system, like a CAD package, or by creating a text file that has a programming language-like syntax to describe the elements. Either way, you will be specifying what objects are in your imaginary world, what shape they are, where they are, what colour and texture they have and where the light sources are to illuminate them. Having done all of this, you feed it into your ray tracer, sit back and wait. And wait... That's the main drawback of ray tracing - it's not fast. The software actually mathematically models the light rays as they bounce around this virtual world, reflecting, refracting and generally having a good time until they end up in the lense of your imaginary camera. This can quite literally involve thousands and millions of floating-point calculations and this takes time. Tracing images can take anything from a few seconds to many days. It's a long process, I know, but the results can make it all worth while. Ray tracing isn't the only method for creating photo-realistic pictures. There are packages like 3D Studio which uses scanline rendering, Radiance, which uses radiosity, and so on. Although these don't count as ray tracing, the methods you use from one system to the next are often sufficiently similar to warrant their discussion in this group. So if you think it's relevant, feel free to bring it up. These systems will be mentioned in a little more detail later on. ------------------------------ Subject: 1 - Ray Tracing Software ------------------------------ Subject 1.1 - POV-Ray The Persistance of Vision Ray Tracer (POV-Ray) is an all-round excellent package, but there are two things that particularly make it stand out above the rest of the crowd. Firstly, it's free, and secondly, the source is distributed so you can compile it on virtually any platform. It's without doubt the most used package among the comp.graphics.rendering.raytracing crowd and well worth checking out if you haven't already. POV-Ray is based on David Buck's original ray tracer, DKB-Trace and has been (and still is) developed and supported by a whole crowd of people on CompuServe Graphics Developers' Forum (GO GRAPHDEV). After a drought of over two years, a new release of POV-Ray (version 3.0) is officially available. For those of you who participated in the public beta testing, you can finally stop downloading new versions as the beta binaries expire. Even better, the source code is finally available, so all those people who want to start tinkering and adding new features can do so. There are now three official distribution sites for POV-Ray. ftp://ftp.povray.org/ [204.216.27.14] main site in North America. ftp://ftp.uwa.uwa.edu.au/ [130.95.128.1] for the Southern Hemisphere. There is also a growing list of sites that mirror all or part of ftp.povray.org (see 2 - FTP Sites, Web Sites, Bulletin Boards, etc.). The files that make up official 3.0 versions of POV-Ray are: - povmsdos.zip MS-DOS 32-bit binary, scene files, and docs - povmsd_s.zip MS-DOS source code - povwin3.zip Windows 32-bit binaries, scene files, and docs - povlinux.tgz Linux for x86 ELF binaries, scene files, and docs - povsunos.tgz SunOS SPARC binaries, scene files, and docs - povuni_s.tgz Unix source files - povuni_d.tgz Unix documentation, include, sample scene files - povmac68.sit.hqx Mac 680x0 with FPU binary, scene files, docs - povmacnf.sit.hqx Mac 680x0 witout FPU binary, scene files, docs - povpmac.sit.hqx Mac PowerPC binary, scene files, docs - povmacs.sit.hqx Mac source files There will also be official executables available for Amiga and OS/2, as well as unofficial executables for other platforms in the near future. If your system is not in this list, it is recommended that you use the generic Unix sources for compiling POV-Ray. You can also find the above archives packaged in different formats or binaries for other platforms. If you have access to several networked computers and a compiler, it is possible to have POV-Ray 2.2 render using multiple CPUs using the PVM system of distributed computing. More information is at: http://www-mddsp.enel.ucalgary.ca/People/adilger/povray/pvmpov.html There is a large collection of software related to POV-Ray available on the Raytrace! CD-ROM from Walnut Creek. This includes modellers, viewers, utility programs, scene files, and rendered images. For For your browsing pleasure, you can have a look at almost the whole contents of the CD-ROM at http://www.povray.org/pov-cdrom/ There will also be an updated version of the POV-Ray CD-ROM with the new 3.0 version sometime in the future. ------------------------------ Subject 1.2 - Rayshade Rayshade is a free ray tracing package originally developed in 1988 by Craig Kolb , David Dobkin, and David Hoffman for Unix/X11, but it has since been ported to several platforms and re-written and improved several times since. Several non-UNIX ports are available, including DOS, Amiga, Mac, and OS/2. This is the program often used by universities for teaching ray tracing and as a result, it is often also used for research on rendering and object generation. Because of its extensibility, there are a large number of user-contributed additions and modifications to the base renderer. This means that many incredible images and ideas saw first "light" under Rayshade. The image gallery at the Rayshade Homepage can bear witness to this. The "official" FTP and WWW sites are located at: ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/Graphics/rayshade/ ftp://graphics.stanford.edu/pub/rayshade/ http://www-graphics.stanford.edu/~cek/rayshade/rayshade.html There are (at least) two programs to distribute rayshade traces over multiple systems. One is inetray, the other raynet, available at: ftp://maggia.ethz.ch/pub/inetray/ ftp://mars.sapham.debis.de/pub/raynet/ ------------------------------ Subject 1.3 - Radiance and ADELINE Radiance is a free Unix software package that adopts a radiosity-type approach to lighting simluation. A MS-DOS version is now available as part of the ADELINE 2.0 software package for a site license fee from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Greg Ward , discusses Radiance here: "I've spent the past ten or so years developing a ray tracing program for lighting simulation and rendering called Radiance. Although it doesn't use the typical finite-element/form-factor approach of radiosity programs, it does compute what they compute plus some. Specifically, Radiance computes diffuse, specular and directional- diffuse reflection and transmission in arbitrarily complicated environments. Here is a short description: Radiance is a suite of programs for the analysis and visualization of lighting in design. Input files specify the scene geometry, materials, luminaires, time, date and sky conditions (for daylight calculations). Calculated values include spectral radiance (ie. luminance & color), irradiance (illuminance & color) and glare indices. Simulation results may be displayed as color images, numerical values and contour plots. The primary advantage of Radiance over simpler lighting calculation and rendering tools is that there are no limitations on the geometry or the materials that may be simulated. Radiance is used by architects and engineers to predict illumination, visual quality and appearance of innovative design spaces, and by researchers to evaluate new lighting and daylighting technologies. Radiance has been written up in many technical and non-technical articles in various journals and magazines. Most recently, a Radiance-generated image appeared on the cover of the 1992 Siggraph Proceedings. There are hundreds of happy Radiance users world-wide, including public and private research institutions as well as engineering and architecture firms. I guess that's all I can think of to say about it at the moment..." -Greg The Unix version of the software is free, in source code, runs on most Unix/X11 platforms, and is available in source form: ftp://hobbes.lbl.gov/ [128.3.12.38] in California and ftp://nestor.epfl.ch/ [128.178.139.3] in Switzerland. The Radiance WWW home page can be found at: http://radsite.lbl.gov/radiance/HOME.html A version of Radiance for MS-DOS is available as part of a software package called ADELINE. ADELINE is being distributed by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. For detailed information and an online order form, please see: http://radsite.lbl.gov/adeline/HOME.html An FTP site with basic info and an ASCII order form is available at: ftp://hobbes.lbl.gov/pub/adeline/ ------------------------------ Subject 1.4 - Blue Moon Rendering Tools (BMRT) The Blue Moon Rendering Tools (BMRT for short), are a set of rendering programs and libraries, written by Larry Gritz for his Ph.D. research work, which adhere to the RenderMan(R) standard as set forth by Pixar. Pixar's implementation of the Renderman standard is a program called Photorealistic RenderMan (PRMan), which uses a method of rendering called REYES, which is based in scan-line rendering methods. BMRT, on the other hand, includes a simple wire-frame renderer, an OpenGL renderer, and most importantly, a renderer which uses some of the latest techniques of radiosity and ray tracing to produce near photorealistic images. BMRT also supports RIB files directly, and can compile Shading Language (.sl) shaders using the included Shading Language Compiler (although the output is NOT compatible with the .slo files used by PRMan). BMRT is avaiable for most popular Unix platforms in binary form. The BMRT licencing agreement allows unlimited free use for non-commercial users, but it must be registered for use by or for commercial applications. Larry asks that people only download BMRT from the official FTP site: ftp://ftp.gwu.edu/pub/graphics/BMRT/ [128.164.9.5] http://www.seas.gwu.edu/student/gritz/bmrt.html ------------------------------ Subject 1.5 - Polyray The program Polyray is a shareware rendering program for producing scenes of 3D shapes and surfaces. The means of description range from standard primitives like box, sphere, etc. to 3 variable polynomial expression, and finally (and slowest of all) surfaces containing transcendental functions like sin, cos, log. Polyray supports rendering in a number of different modes: Raytracing, Zbuffered polygon rendering (fully textures or Gourad shaded), wireframe and hidden line, and raw triangles (as ASCII output, one tri per line). The texturing in Polyray is not limited to a few predefined styles - you can use mathematical expressions to modify any part of the shading. Note that the version available online is the complete thing. Polyray is not crippled in any way, nor are there any annoying nag screens. The extended DOS version of Polyray is available at: ftp://ftp.povray.org/pub/polyray/ UNIX versions are available at: http://www.inf.fu-berlin.de/~leitner/grafik/polyray.html (binaries for: HP-UX, Linux, FreeBSD, Sun OS 4&5, SGI/IRIX 4&5) ------------------------------ Subject 1.6 - Vivid (including BOB) Vivid is a shareware ray tracer for IBM PC's by Stephen Coy . Version 2, the current publicly available version, is available from several FTP sites as vivid2.zip. Version 3 is expected soon (I expect it is already available [AED]). Compared to POV-Ray, Vivid doesn't have as many features, but in many cases it can run faster. Source code isn't available, so the package is limited to systems which can run DOS executables. Stephen Coy, Christopher Watkins and Mark Finlay co-authored a book on Ray Tracing called "Photorealism and Ray Tracing in C". Distributed free with the book was an example ray tracer called BOB. This was actually a cut down version of Vivid which did include source. (see also 5 - Further Information and Resources). ------------------------------ Subject 1.7 - Others There are many other ray tracing packages available; ART, DKBtrace, RTrace, RAY4, MTV, QRT, and DBW for instance, and some for parallel tracing: XDART, RRLib, prt, and VMpRAY. Eric Haines' Ray Tracing News (see 5 - Further Information and Resources), or the comp.graphics.misc FAQ for more info. ------------------------------ Subject 1.8 - Non-Ray Tracing Software * Pixar's Photo-Realistic Renderman Because of the excellent and sophisticated techniques used in PRMan, many people think that it is a ray tracer, when in fact PRMan is a REYES based software package (REYES is based in scanline methods). PRMan is the grand-daddy of all high-end rendering packages, and was the source of many of the techniques used in rendering software today. Pixar showcased their skills in short animations such as Tin Toy and Red's Dream. PRMan was used to render the Walt-Disney feature film Toy Story. There is a newsgroup news:comp.graphics.rendering.renderman devoted to the discussion of all implementations of the Renderman language. * 3D Studio Autodesk's 3d Studio is an interactive 3d modelling, rendering and animation package for the IBM PC platform. It employs scanline rendering to achieve photo-realistic effects rather than ray tracing. Because of this, it cannot do true shadows, reflections or refractions, but can, in many cases, simulate them accurately enough for most purposes. The package costs several thousand dollars, even with an educational discount. There is a newsgroup for discussions on this package. news:comp.graphics.packages.3dstudio * Alias The newsgroup for this software is news:comp.graphics.apps.alias * Lightwave The newsgroup for this is news:comp.graphics.apps.lightwave Note that there is also a group news:comp.graphics.rendering.misc for the discussion of general rendering issues. ------------------------------ Subject: 2 - FTP Sites, Web Sites, Bulletin Boards, etc. ------------------------------ Subject 2.1 - FTP Sites The following list details some of the main graphics related FTP sites, their maintainers (where known) and any other info. For a more complete list of FTP sites, see the list by Eric Haines and Nick Fotis from which much of the following has been taken. * ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/ [128.252.135.4] George Kyriazis A huge repository of graphics stuff, particulary: - /graphics/graphics - get CONTENTS file. - /graphics/graphics/objects/TDDD - the TDDD objects/converters. - /mirrors/unix-c/graphics - Rayshade, MTV, FBM, PBMPLUS, etc. - /mirrors/msdos/graphics - DKB ray tracer, FLI RayTracker demos. - /graphics/graphics/mirrors - mirrors many sites. - /pub/rad.tar.Z - SGI_RAD. - /graphics/graphics/radiosity - Radiance and Indian packages. - /systems/ibmpc/msdos/graphics - loads of PC graphics stuff. * ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de/ [134.106.1.9] Frank Neumann Another good site for ray tracing, particulary POV-Ray. - /pub/pov-ray - get INDEX for full details - /pub/pov-ray/conv - format converters - /pub/pov-ray/edit - graphical editors - /pub/pov-ray/ext - source extensions - /pub/pov-ray/gen - data file generators - /pub/pov-ray/misc - other tools, ray tracers, etc. - /pub/pov-ray/new - uploads - /pub/pov-ray/obj - objects - /pub/pov-ray/pack - compression - /pub/pov-ray/pix - pictures - /pub/pov-ray/scen - scenes - /pub/pov-ray/text - text articles - /pub/pov-ray/view - viewers - /pub/pov-ray/pbin - unofficial POV binaries * ftp://ftp.povray.org/ [192.216.222.14] http://www.povray.org/ [192.216.222.14] Christopher Cason This has become the primary site for POV-Ray. It contains a large number of POV-Ray utilities, executables, and scenes. This site has also grown to have a mirror of avalon.vislab.navy.mil (see below), as well as polyray and rayshade. - /pub/povray/Hall-Of-Fame - incredible ray traced images - /pub/povray/Official - official sources and executables - /pub/povray/Ray-Tracing-News - archive of Eric Haines' newsletter - /pub/povray/animation - animations created with POV-Ray - /pub/povray/ezine - a magazine about POV-Ray - /pub/povray/fonts - font utilities - /pub/povray/modellers - CAD packages for creating scene files - /pub/povray/objects - a collection of POV objects - /pub/povray/scenes - complete POV-Ray scene files - /pub/povray/unofficial - modifications and executables by others - /pub/povray/utilities - tools and programs to make life easier - /pub/competition - images from old ray tracing competition - /pub/irtc - images from new bi-monthly ray tracing competition - /pub/mirrors/avalon - avalon.vislab.navy.mil mirror (See below) - /pub/polyray - Polyray source files Due to increasing demand for better access, ftp.povray.org now has several mirror sites around the world. ftp://uniwa.uwa.edu.au/ (Official) [130.95.128.1] ftp://sunsite.wits.ac.za/pub/mirrors/ [146.141.15.214] http://wuarchive.wustl.edu/graphics/graphics/mirrors/ [128.252.135.4] ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/graphics/graphics/mirrors/ [128.252.135.4] ftp://plaza.aarnet.edu.au/graphics/graphics/mirrors/ [139.130.23.2] ftp://ftp.shu.ac.uk/pub/computing/packages/raytrace/ [143.52.20.24] http://www.hensa.ac.uk/ftp/mirrors/povray/ [129.12.200.129] ftp://www.hensa.ac.uk/ftp/mirrors/povray/ [129.12.200.129] http://ftp.nectec.or.th/pub/mirrors/ray-tracing/ [192.150.251.33] ftp://ftp.nectec.or.th/pub/mirrors/ray-tracing/ [192.150.251.33] ftp://ftp.etsimo.uniovi.es/pub/raytrace/ [156.35.23.24] ftp://ftp.tu-clausthal.de/pub/mirror/povray/ [139.174.2.10] The POV-Ray CD-ROM from Walnut Creek Raytrace! is now available online. Check it out at: http://www.povray.org/pov-cdrom/ * ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/ [128.112.128.1] Craig Kolb Home of Rayshade, and other graphics tid-bits. - /pub/Graphics/GraphicsGems - source code from Graphics Gems books - /pub/Graphics/URT - Utah Raster Toolkit - /pub/Graphics/SPD - Standard Procedural Database - /pub/Graphics/rayshade - rayshade source code - /pub/Graphics/RTNews - Ray Tracing News - /pub/Graphics/Papaers - ray tracing papers, bibliographies * ftp://avalon.viewpoint.com/ [204.212.34.3] http://www.viewpoint.com/ [204.212.34.10] Webmaster Avalon was created to be a 3D object "repository" for the net. 3D objects (multiple formats), utilities, and file format documents are only part of what is available here. Since July 1995, Avalon has been run by Viewpoint, a commercial 3D model vendor, but they insist that the Avalon models will still be available for free to all. This site is also mirrored by (among others): http://wuarchive.wustl.edu/graphics/graphics/mirrors/avalon/ ftp://ftp.povray.org/pub/mirrors/avalon/ ftp://sunsite.wits.ac.za/pub/mirrors/ftp.povray.org/mirrors/avalon/ * http://cedar.cic.net/~rtilmann/mm/ [192.131.22.3] Webmaster Meshmart is a repository of 3D objects in a variety of formats. Not only does MeshMart have objects available, they also have objects on consignment as well as an "objects wanted" area. * ftp://hobbes.lbl.gov/ [128.3.12.38] http://radsite.lbl.gov/radiance/HOME.html [128.3.12.33] Greg Ward Official distribution site for Radiance ray trace/radiosity package. * ftp://ftp.cs.berkeley.edu/ [128.32.35.31] - /pub/graphics/mm/encode - MPEG encoding software - /pub/graphics/mm/play - MPEG decoding/display software * ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/ [18.70.0.209] http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/bngusenet/top.html [164.107.8.52] - /pub/usenet/news.answers - the land of FAQs. ------------------------------ Subject 2.2 - Bulletin Board Systems The following list details some Bulletin Boards Systems dedicated to graphics and, in particular Ray Tracing. At the end of the section there is a list of BBS'es of PCGNet (Professional CAD and Graphics Network) kindly provided by Bjorn-Kare Nilssen This list may be out of date at the time of printing. If you know one of the boards here no longer works please let me know. * The Graphics Alternative TGA is heavily orientated around Ray Tracing, 3D Rendering, Modelling and Animation. It's the official support BBS for Vivid and has an extensive library of utilities, programs, source and images built up by its 1300+ users. Location: El Cerrito, CA, USA. Sysop: Adam Shiffman Data: (510) 524-2780 (PM14400FXSA v.32bis 14.4k, Public) (510) 524-2165 (USR DS v.32bis/HST 14.4k, Subscribers) WWW: http://www.tgax.com/ * Pi Squared On the East Coast of the USA is Pi Squared. Alfonso Hermida is the sysop and he is the creator of POVCAD. All the latest POV files available as well as support for his own products. Location: Maryland, USA. Sysop: Alfonso Hermida (CIS: 72114,2060) Data: (301) 725-9080 (14.4K, 24hrs) * The Tackle Box A huge BBS dedicated to POV-Ray with hundreds of modelling utilities, source, pictures and animations. 2 GIG online, 24 hours a day. Walnut Creek "RayTrace!" CD ROM is now loaded with 200 file areas. The first month is 100% FREE with subscription. Location: Edmond, Oklahoma, USA. Sysop: Neil Clark Data: (405) 359-3301 (14.4K, N/8/1, 24hrs) WWW: http://www.ionet.net/~clark/ (Files available for ftp) * The New Graphics BBS A graphics specific system for those interested in 3D, objects, image processing, animation, MPEG, JPEG, GIF, file formats, etc. Knowledge Media "Graphics 1" CD-ROM available, 645 Mb "MultiMedia" CD online shortly. Location: ? Sysop: Bob Lindabury Data: (908) 469-0049 (14.4K, 24hrs) * The Graphics Emporium BBS A BBS for the graphics professional and hobbyist to exchange ideas, information and creativity. Not dedicated to any one platform. Location: Redondo Beach, CA, USA. Sysop: ? Data: (310) 374-8805 * Windows World BBS Specializing in DOS/MS-Windows based ray tracing, mathematics, stock market technical analysis and also the latest CICA Windows CDs (1 gig). No fees and free access. Requires MS-Windows 3.1 and the Excalibur(tm) client communications program to access the BBS. It is down-loadable on the first call. Location: Dayton, OH, USA Sysop: H. Lawrence Rowe (hrowe@erinet.com) Data: (513) 866-8181 (V.22-V.34, 24hrs) * Boards of the Professional CAD and Graphics Network USA and Canada ------------------------------------------------------------------- SAUG BBS Bellevue WA 206-644-7115 Joes CODE BBS West Bloomfield MI 810-855-0894 Engineering Services Atlanta GA 404-325-0122 Autodesk Global Village Sausalito CA 415-289-2270 The Graphics Alternative El Cerrito CA 510-524-2780 PC-AUG Phoenix AZ 602-952-0638 Convergence Spline BBS Richmond BC 604-275-3462 Graphicly Speaking Langley BC 604-534-2954 Tern Solution BBS Ottawa ON 613-228-0539 Canis Major Nashville TN 615-385-4268 CAD Engineering Services Hendersonville TN 615-822-2539 The Virtual Dimension Oceanside CA 619-722-0746 The Drawing Board BBS Anchorage AL 907-349-5412 The University Shrewsbury Twp NJ 908-544-8193 France ------------------------------------------------------------------- CAD Connection Montesson 33-1-39529854 Zyllius BBS! Saint Paul 33-93320505 United Kingdom ------------------------------------------------------------------- Raytech BBS Tain, UK 44-1862-832020 The Missing Link Surrey, England 44-81-641-8593 CADenza BBS Leicester, UK 44-533-596725 New Zealand ------------------------------------------------------------------- The Graphics Connection Wellington 64-4-566-8450 Australia ------------------------------------------------------------------- The Baud Room Melbourne 61-3-481-6873 Sydney PCUG Compaq New South Wales 61-2-540-1842 My Computer Company Erskineville 61-2-557-1489 Slovenia ------------------------------------------------------------------- MicroArt Koper 386-66-34986 Germany ------------------------------------------------------------------- NEWS BBS Duesseldorf 49-211-680-1458 The Netherlands old number new number ------------------------------------------------------------------- BBS_Bennekom: Fractal Board Bennekom 31-8389-15331 31-318-415331 CAD-BBS Amsterdam 31-3402-90287 31-30-6090287 Foundation One Baarn 31-2154-22143 31-35-5422143 Some of the above may require additional country or long-distance codes. ------------------------------ Subject 2.3 - Mailing Lists Listed below is a selection of mailing lists related to graphics and/or ray tracing. If I haven't included specific details on subscription, it's because I don't know. Best bet is to send a "help" message. * POV-Ray Called the dkb-list for historical reasons (POV-Ray was based on David Buck's "DKBTrace"), the list exists for users of POV-Ray and associated products, on all platforms. Subscription: listserv%TREARN.BITNET@vm.gmd.de Body Text: subscribe dkb-l Posting: DKB-L%TREARN.BITNET@listserv.gmd.de * Rayshade Mailing list for Rayshade users, mainly on UNIX platforms. Subscription: rayshade-users-request@cs.princeton.edu Posting: rayshade-users@cs.princeton.edu Archive: ftp://graphics.stanford.edu/pub/rayshade/rayshade-users/ * Radiance Greg Ward, the author of Radiance has a distribution list of all users. Register with him: greg@pink.lbl.gov * Imagine For users of the Imagine 3d rendering and animation package for the Amiga and, more recently, the IBM PC. Subscription: listserv@sjuvm.stjohns.edu Body Text: subscribe imagine Posting: imagine@sjuvm.stjohns.edu * Toaster This list deals with the Video Toaster system for the Amiga. Subscription: toaster-request@bobsbox.rent.com Body Text: subscribe
toaster Posting: toaster@bobsbox.rent.com * Lightwave Lightwave is part of the suite of programs that come with the Video Toaster system for the Amiga. Subscription: lightwave-request@bobsbox.rent.com Body Text: subscribe
lightwave Posting: lightwave@bobsbox.rent.com * TrueSpace This is a mailing list for users of trueSpace, maintained by Shane Davison . Subscription: truespace-request@caligari.com Body Text: subscribe
truespace Posting: truespace@caligari.com * 3D Studio Autodesk's 3d modelling and rendering system for the IBM PC. Subscription: 3dstudio-request@bobsbox.rent.com Body Text: subscribe
3dstudio Posting: 3dstudio@bobsbox.rent.com ------------------------------ Subject 2.4 - Others * CompuServe The CompuServe POV-Ray Forum (GO POVRAY) is the home of POV-Ray (multiple sections devoted to POV and POV images). This is where the POV-Team hangs out and discusses what they will put in the next version. There are also many other forums devoted to computer graphics, animation, and morphing. You can get information on joining CompuServe (in the US) by calling (800) 848-8990. * America On-Line AOL also has a section (PCGRAPHICS) dedicated to POV-Ray support. ------------------------------ Subject: 3 - Modelling Software ------------------------------ Subject 3.1 - SCED SCED is a constraint based scene editor written by Stephen Chenney . Stephen also maintains a mailing list for bug reports, patches, and early notification of new releases. Sced is a scene modeller for UNIX and X. It runs on many UNIX platforms, including Linux. It is being distributed as source code. The latest version is always available at: http://http.cs.berkeley.edu/~schenney/sced/sced.html ftp://ftp.povray.org/pub/povray/modellers/sced/ ftp://ftp.cs.su.oz.au/stephen/sced/ An enhancement to SCED by Denis McLaughlin, called SCEDA, has all the features of SCED, but also adds support for keyframed animation. Animated objects have their position, rotation, and scale interpolated smoothly across multiple keyframes via a (modified) spline function. SCEDA is available at: ftp://ftp.cyberus.ca/pub/sceda/ You can find out more about SCEDA at: http://www.cyberus.ca/~denism/sceda/sceda.html. Feature List: * Cube, Cylinder, Cone, Plane, Sphere primitives. * Full support for CSG, including CSG wireframes that look like CSG objects. * A constraint based editing interface, which supports the accurate placement of object relative to other objects, and dynamic constraint maintenance. * Previewing using your favorite renderer. * Arbitrary, dynamic view of the scene. * Support for Radiance, RenderMan, POV-Ray, Rayshade, and VRML. * Target renderer specific attributes - allowing the full range of POV textures to be accessed, including the declaration of new textures and the inclusion of files. * Arbitrarily dense wireframes. * A simple input file format. * Support for arbitrary OFF format polygonal objects. * Automatic compression and decompression of files. * Spotlight and Area light sources. * Removal of many restrictions on the editing of CSG objects, including the ability to change the basic type of an object. * Lots of bug fixes. This version is now very stable under Linux and Solaris at least. The last very was regretably unstable. * Lots of small improvements to things like previewing, selection, handling of objects behind the eye and so on. Tutorials are provided to introduce use of the interface. The system has been tested on several platforms, and appears to be easy to port to different systems. It REQUIRES X11 Release 5. Note that POV 2.2 NEEDS TO BE PATCHED to use files created by SCED. Binaries will soon be available for Linux and Solaris. Binaries for other platforms are also desired. Planned in the future: * POV->Sced conversion program, for editing an old POV file. * Bezier patch and arbitrary wireframe support. ------------------------------ Subject 3.2 - MORAY MORAY, by Lutz and Kretzschmar [CIS: 100023, 2006], is a shareware modeller for PC's that directly supports POV-Ray 2.x primitives and more. Registration is required to get you a protected mode version, allowing full memory usage, plus the usual support and upgrade info. MORAY is a program with which you can design scenes for the POV-Ray raytracer to render. Contrary to normal scene design, with MORAY you design the scenes graphically. Up to now it was pretty difficult to imagine what the scene looked like, without laying it out on graph paper, or doing many test renders. MORAY is like a graph paper, it lets you place and change objects in wireframe while you see them. MORAY then generates the text file that POV needs to read. MORAY can thus also be used as a rapid prototype tool, to place objects quickly and write the scene file. You can then edit scene files to suit your needs, just like you have been doing up to now. MORAY stores and works with POV-Ray primitives, as opposed to normal CAD systems, which mostly convert all objects to triangle meshes or similar polygon based formats when outputting. This ensures optimum performance and image quality from the raytracer. If you're a POV enthusiast and have access to CompuServe you should check out the POVRAY forum for the latest news and tips on using POV. The RayTracing conference on PCGnet carries tips for using POV. The emphasis in designing MORAY was to be able to work as easily and as graphically as possible. Most of the work can be done with the mouse. Three 2D views and a 3D view of your scene are visible on screen. You can perform all transformations of the objects in the 2D views with the mouse. The 3D view shows what the current camera will see, i.e. how POV will raytrace it. MORAY allows you to: * scale, rotate and translate an object interactively * define cameras with which to view your scene * view the scene in wire frame as POV-Ray will raytrace it * specify the wire-frame complexity of on screen objects * graphically place a bounding box around an object * automatically create bounding boxes of any objects * make nested CSG or composite objects * assign textures from the TEXTURES.INC file to your objects * define a new texture from within MORAY * place imagemaps interactively on objects * manipulate the control points of a bezier patch to create shapes not easily created otherwise * create bezier patch meshes * create rotational, translational and tapering sweeps that are output as smooth triangles * copy complex nested objects * create multiple copies of objects, transforming each independently * specify a region of the 3D view to render * call POV-Ray from within MORAY to render scenes Features new with MORAY 2.0 include: * A complete 100% Texture Editor for POV-Ray 2.2 with Preview. * Polyray V1.8 support and output of all scenes. * Faster, more streamlined (and more attractive) interface. * Fewer redraws and they're now interruptible. * Right-Mouse-button support. * New Sweep editors and types. * New Objects (Blobs, RAW triangles, User-defined objects). * Completely new File Handling. * Shallow and deep copies. * CSG evaluation. * Actual Heightfield display (for TGA). * Improved, more efficient output. * Freely definable viewports. * Manipulations in 3D views. * Spotlight views. * Multi-level Undo for major scene operations. MORAY requires at least a 386, a VGA card and a mouse, although this is not recommended. The minimum usable system for larger scenes would be a 486DX/25 and 4MB memory. The shareware version needs 2MB EMS, but this limitation is removed in the registered version, since it runs in protected mode. ------------------------------ Subject 3.3 - GUM GUM is a solid and surface modeller that currently supports POV, Polyray and Rayce and runs in MS-Windows. The author is Lex van der Sluijs . GUM is DemoWare: the demo is yours and you have NO obligation to register whatsoever, but there is a limitation: only 50 objects can be saved. The registered version naturally has no such limitation. GUM stands for 'Grand Unified Modeller' which means two things: * It will never be done. * The fact that its internal data structure can accomodate all major object types, that is solids (implicit, b-rep), surfaces (parametric and polyhedral) and wireframe objects. (and yes, a layout of its C++ class hierarchy takes many pages). The current version can be found at: ftp://ftp.povray.org/pub/povray/modellers/gum/ CAD BBS Holland (+31-3402-90287) where it is a free file CompuServe, in the GRAPHDEV forum, thanks to Harry Rowe I won't list the list of supported objects here since that would become a bit long. Instead, some highlights: * CSG evaluation, (wireframe representation of CSG Differences) * 3D direct manipulation: 3D handles on objects like on the SGI * support for trimmed surfaces (trimmed with a solid, that is) Polyray can render these. * real-time pan and zoom (non-real-time also possible) * several renderers can be supported at once * relatively advanced texture- (and other types of declaration) handling, resulting in self-contained scene-files. * heightfield reading for Targa files: see what you're doing * Custom objects for external/not-yet-supported/huge objects * support for 'extra special' features via the Header dialog (timer variables, directional & textured lights, etc) * the ability to find all used files used in the scene * a robust RAW file reader * Object library feature: use objects from other GUM scenes * flexible FastDraw: Full, Skip(variable), Bounding Box. Static, during viewport change/object dragging (multiple-viewport too) * Automatic starting of the specified renderer, automatic starting of your favourite imageviewer when the image is done Some 'lowlights' (all of which will -naturally- be addressed): * cumbersome installation procedure * lack of sweeps * lack of blobs * cylinders, cones and paraboloids must be capped manually by intersecting them with discs System requirements: 386+387 @ 40 MHz with 4 Mb RAM. An 800x600 display is highly recommended, although 640x480 can be used. GUM plus one renderer takes about 6 Mb on your harddisk. Here are some frequently asked questions and their answers about GUM, but first there are two things that should be brought to your attention: * there's already a FAQ in the manual, see the Contents topic. The Q&A's here have popped up after the release of the program. * most questions about usage of the program can be eliminated if you do the Quick Start, also in GUM's help-file. Q: I get a list of warnings every time I try to render or save something, saying that some 'pages' could not be found. However, all these 'pages' are POV/Polyray/Rayce keywords, such as 'marble', 'green' and 'diffuse'. A: You need to move GUM.INI from GUM's directory to your WINDOWS directory. If it's not there, extract a fresh GUM.INI from GUM091EX.ZIP. In it are the keywords that have special meaning to programs like POV, and without the file GUM can't discern between references to other definitions (like using the normal 'Bumpy' in 'BumpyGlass') and keywords (such as 'red' and 'ior'). Q: When I try to start the program I get an error message saying that CTL3DV2.DLL is not correctly installed. A: More than one copy of this DLL could be found by MS-Windows, which is not allowed for this particular file, hence the cryptic error message. You should find the most recent copy of it on your system, move it to WINDOWS\SYSTEM and delete all others. ------------------------------ Subject 3.4 - Breeze Designer Breeze Designer is a freeware 32-bit 3D modelling and design tool written by John Neville for MS-Windows (NT, 95, Win32s). It has been written to primarily interface with the Persistance of Vision raytracer (POV-Ray version 2.0 & 3.0), there is also support to export to a number of other popular renderers including Pixars's RenderMan. Some of its features include: * Modelling primitives; cube, sphere, cone, cylinder, torus, bicubic "Bezier" patches * Text objects using TrueType fonts * Heightfields, spline paths and extruded shapes * Iso-surfaces; blobs (metaballs). * Surfaces of revolution (sweeps). * Built-in texture builder and shaded preview. * Object grouping with CSG support. * Keyframe animation support, with tween function and spline paths. * Import Autodesk 3D-Studio(TM) 3DS and AutoCAD DXF format models. * Export POV-Ray, RenderMan RIB, VRML scene, Polyray, AutoCAD DXF. * Built-in macro language and third party plug-in module support. * Support for OpenGL with texture mapping for Windows NT/95 * Support for the Intel(R) 3DR rendering library. * On-line help & tool tips support. Breeze is available for download at: ftp://ftp.povray.org/pub/povray/modellers/breeze/ ftp://blitzen.canberra.edu.au/pub/povray/breeze/ ------------------------------ Subject 3.5 - POVLAB POVLAB is a shareware DOS based 3D graphic modeller for POV-Ray 3.0 written by Denis Olivier . Here's are some of its features: * Very friendly to use (new style interface, never seen before!). * Plug-ins allow you to program you own object generators/animators. * Support for a lot of the new options in POV-Ray 3.0. * 4 viewports (left, front, top and camera), full viewport allowed. * Material/texture preview/editing, library management, add your own. * Real time camera, like 3D Studio does. * Uses real camera, based on FOV in POV-Ray, including focal blur. * Normal/fast/boxed display, freezed/ignored objects, heightfield. * Raw objects - sphere, box, cone, blobs, tube, torus, plane, ... * CSG (copy, merge, difference, union). * 3D TrueType fonts (thanks to Jean Arnaud). * Selection (rotation, scale, translate, copy, ...). * Deformation (matrix scale, translate and rotate based). * Lights : omni, spot, area light (color, shadows, on/off). * Atmospheric effects (fog, distance attenuation, atmosphere) * Built-in or external image viewers can be used. System requirements for POVLAB are floating point unit (387/487SX or 486/P5/P6), 8MB RAM (up to 32 MB virtual memory), 30MB disk space, mouse, and 16/256 color SVGA/VESA 1.2. It also works under OS/2 and Win95, and supports rendering with WinPOV. POVLAB images, tips, faq, plug-ins and more are available at: http://www.cyberstation.fr/~dolivier/povlab.html ------------------------------ Subject 3.6 - Other Modellers * AC3D AC3D, by Andy Colebourne , is reportedly a very easy to use 3D object/scene modeller currently available for SGI, SUN, and Linux platforms. It outputs POV, Renderman, VRML, Dive, and Massive files. The Linux binary is shareware, while the SGI and SUN versions are free. Source is not available. More details, manual, and binary downloads are available at: http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/computing/users/andy/ac3d.html * Blob Sculptor Blob Sculptor, by Alfonso Hermida, Steve Anger and Truman Brown allows you to model shapes using blob primitives. Output is to RAW, DXF, BLB (internal format), POV, Polyray, Rayshade and CTDS. In addition, the MS-Windows version, ported by Ronal Praver, supports NFF, VideoScape and others. NeXTStep and Open GL ports are expected soon. -- Andreas Dilger University of Calgary \"If a man ate a pound of pasta and (403) 220-8792 Micronet Research Group \ a pound of antipasto, would they Dept of Electrical & Computer Engineering \ cancel out, leaving him still http://www-mddsp.enel.ucalgary.ca/People/adilger/ hungry?" -- Dogbert .