sfdex opened this issue on May 20, 2004 ยท 8 posts
sfdex posted Thu, 20 May 2004 at 6:38 PM
Kixum posted Thu, 20 May 2004 at 7:07 PM
An excellent result! -Kix
-Kix
sailor_ed posted Thu, 20 May 2004 at 8:11 PM
If you're using 2.1 you should see the vertex modeler in C3! Ed
brainmuffin posted Thu, 20 May 2004 at 9:41 PM
much power in the vertex modeler there is.... sometimes difficult to wield, but much power, yes.... That is a very cool.. uh, something-a-hedron. very nice work!
sfdex posted Fri, 21 May 2004 at 10:30 AM
Thanks! We have C3 on the way here at work.... I'm very excited. And Yoda, uh, I mean Brainmuffin, it's a dodecahedron. Those of us who are of the right age will probably remember Cosmos with Carl Sagan's singular voice describing the Dooodekhaheedron. That man did more to excite the public about science than any other single person in recent memory.
ShawnDriscoll posted Fri, 21 May 2004 at 6:10 PM
Mr. Wizard was cool. Sagan was too much of a doomsayer with his nuclear winter rants. He was replaced by Al Gore, who rants about global warming now.
willf posted Sun, 23 May 2004 at 12:05 AM
Cool model, one of these days I might venture into the Vertex modeler again. The Wizard was a practical scientist who proved scientific theories with real-world experiments that any kid could understand. Kind of what scientists are supposed to do (posit a theory & prove it). Sagan used slick multimedia to try & persuade people to agree with him, not necessarily with the facts. I've often thought that many of his shows should begin with a footnote, "based on theory & conjecture". None the less, Sagan was very influential with the public at large.
sfdex posted Sun, 23 May 2004 at 12:37 PM
I'd have to agree -- Sagan did, indeed, have a political agenda. That said, though, his presentation and popularization of science and, through "Cosmos," the history of science, was invaluable in how many people of my generation it inspired to keep science in our hearts. Besides, I'd never remember what a dodecahedron was called if it hadn't been for Sagan.... I loved Mr. Wizard -- he was on when I was pretty young. There was also a science fiction movie show that had a guy in a study demonstrating some of the scientific concepts that came up in the SF movies. I remember one, in particular, where in the movie, a spaceship had to fly pretty close to the sun. The host of the movie demonstrated how light alone could burn something (a paper model of a spaceship he held really close to a photoflood). It stuck with me, too. I guess there needs to be more science programming on TV. - Dex