FOTD 17-02-11 (Technicolor Midget [7])
FOTD -- February 17, 2011 (Rating 7) Fractal visionaries and enthusiasts: Today's image is a scene in the Z^(1.99)+C Mandeloid. At first glance, this parent fractal appears as an everyday Mandelbrot set. But a bit of thought will reveal that something is wrong with it. To begin, the main spike has been swallowed up, and an extra valley has appeared where the string of buds along the X-axis should lie. This extra valley is filled with discontinui- ties, though it is not without fractal hope. In fact, today's scene lies in this valley. After a modicum of thought, and a consideration of a name such as 'Chrysanthemum', I named the image "Technicolor Midget". Once the image is seen, the name will be self-explanatory. The rating of a 7 is better than recent days, but still leaves something to be desired. Most of the color was generated by the Fractint program with a stroke of the <enter> key. I did tweak a few registers, but not enough to reward myself the standard half-point bonus. Perhaps the best feature of the image is its fireball calcula- tion time of 57 seconds. An equally fast way to view the scene is to surf to the current FOTD web site at: <http://www.emarketingiseasy.com/TESTS/FOTD/jim_muths_fotd.html> where the image has been posted in finished form. The original FOTD web site may be accessed at: <http://www.Nahee.com/FOTD/> Lots of sun and a temperature of 48F +9C here at Fractal Central on Wednesday kept the fractal cats quite content. In the human department, things went well enough also. The next FOTD will be posted in 24 hours. Until then, take care, and be of sound con- stitution, but don't make too much noise while you're at it. Jim Muth jamth@mindspring.com START PARAMETER FILE======================================= Technicolor_Midget { ; time=0:00:57.97-SF5 on P4-2000 reset=2004 type=formula formulafile=slices.frm formulaname=MandelbrotN center-mag=-1.294675469422\ 403/+0.05488858990964249/1.010264e+011/1/17.5/0 params=1.99/0/0/0/0/0 float=y maxiter=1600 inside=0 logmap=219 periodicity=6 colors=0009EK9DI8BG7AE69C57B469357235123011D0QB0NA\ 0L90J80H70F60D40B309206104002000000000000000000000\ 000000000000000zKCuFBpCAk99f68a47X26S26N25J14F13B1\ 27013009mI6cC3U68Kz7Av65m55c54Z43U33P22K21F11A005p\ zJirHckGWcEPYDMTBJPAHM8EI7BE58B4572231f2nX1hM1ZI1P\ D0K90F405G8INCP1a_0YX0VU0SR0POHWMFSJCNGAIC7E959603\ 32432NZ1LX1KV1JT1IR1GP1FN1EM1DK1CI0AG09E08C07B0690\ 47035023011z0Iz0Hz0Gz0Fz0Ez0Dv0Cr0Bm0Ah09c18U17K16\ A15514403302201100`3gR2XI1M90Bzv0vs0rp0mm0mj0mg0me\ 0mb0c_0cX0cU0US0UP0UM0UJ0KG0KE0KB0A80350120PJJNIIM\ HHLGGKFFJEEIDDHCCFCCEBBDAAC99B88A77966766655544433\ 3222111001Q_0MV0JR0GM0DI09D069034Y7cW6cU6cT6cR5cQ5\ cO5cN4cL4cK4cI3cH3cF3cD2cC2cA2c91c71c61c40c30c1Kc0\ Kn0Kk0Ki0Pg0Ud0Zb0c`0hY0mW0rU0zU5zZAzcFzhKzmPzrUzv\ Zzzczzhzzmzzrzzvzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz\ zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz } frm:MandelbrotN {; Jim Muth b=p1, z=p2, c=p3+pixel: z=z^(b)+c, |z| <= 16 } END PARAMETER FILE=========================================
On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 6:29 PM, Jim Muth <jamth@mindspring.com> wrote:
Most of the color was generated by the Fractint program with a stroke of the <enter> key. I did tweak a few registers, but not enough to reward myself the standard half-point bonus.
NIce colors Jim. Thanks for posting it. I am now able to run FractInt using the DOSBox emulator on my Mac and I have been trying to learn some of the basic features of the program. What keys do you press before the enter key to get FractInt to generate a color palette? I did look through the documentation and the program menu pages but I was unable to find that feature. -- Mike Frazier www.fracton.org
Sorry Mike, misread you question...press 'C' to be able to cycle then press enter. Press 'E' then enter to view colour palette. Alex Dukay
On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 9:11 AM, alex dukay <dukay@rogers.com> wrote:
Sorry Mike, misread you question...press 'C' to be able to cycle then press enter. Press 'E' then enter to view colour palette.
Alex Dukay
OK thanks. I see it now. I was confused by thinking color cycling was only to animate a palette you already had. -- Mike Frazier www.fracton.org
Mike Frazier wrote:
On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 9:11 AM, alex dukay wrote:
Sorry Mike, misread you question...press 'C' to be able to cycle then press enter. Press 'E' then enter to view colour palette.
Alex Dukay
OK thanks. I see it now. I was confused by thinking color cycling was only to animate a palette you already had.
I think of "C" standing for just Color, but you're right, it starts color cycling. E is the keystroke for editing a color palette. Another way to work with color palettes for Fractint is to use FTintMap. It's an old Windows utility I find much easier to use than Fractint's color editor. Then you save the palette file, switch back to Fractint and load the new palette file. I think it's available somewhere on the fractint.org site? -- David gnome@hawaii.rr.com authenticity, honesty, community
Another way to work with color palettes for Fractint is to use FTintMap. It's an old Windows utility I find much easier to use than Fractint's color editor. Then you save the palette file, switch back to Fractint and load the new palette file. I think it's available somewhere on the fractint.orgsite?
Thanks for the suggestion, but I was unable to find FTintMap. A Google search didn't turn up anything either. Does anyone have a link? -- Mike Frazier www.fracton.org
Yes, that's the one. Sorry for mangling the name. Bill Jemison wrote:
what i think you are looking for is FIntMap. You can get it at http://www.nahee <http://www.nahee.com/Software/+FIntMap/> .com/Software/+FIntMap/ <http://www.nahee.com/Software/+FIntMap/>
BillJemison
On 2/18/2011 10:41 AM, Mike Frazier wrote:
Another way to work with color palettes for Fractint is to use FTintMap. It's an old Windows utility I find much easier to use than Fractint's color editor. Then you save the palette file, switch back to Fractint and load the new palette file. I think it's available somewhere on the fractint.org <http://fractint.org> site?
Thanks for the suggestion, but I was unable to find FTintMap. A Google search didn't turn up anything either. Does anyone have a link?
-- David gnome@hawaii.rr.com authenticity, honesty, community
participants (5)
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alex dukay -
Bill Jemison -
david -
Jim Muth -
Mike Frazier