kjer stands for "Kansas Jeremy." Yahoo screwed up things and added the rest. My good grrrl's name is "Julie Jane Russell Because She Ain't No Jack" but we just call her Julie and a host of nicknames (Mz. Demeanor, Land Shark, God Damn it!, etc.) BIO Born in North Dakota, learned to talk in Texas, early elementary years in southern Michigan near Lake Huron, brief time in Miami Beach (during WWII), back to Michigan. Parents divorced and we moved back to northcentral Kansas, which became my adopted home (although folks were 4th or 5th generation Kansans). At 18, joined USAF and served a year in Korea (after the cease-fire) and two in southern Japan; however, the only foreign country I served in was pre-Civil Rights movement Gulf Coast Mississippi! :) My Air Force job was control tower operator, then later worked in headquarters administration. Returned to Kansas, got married to wife number 1 and got a college degree (or two plus) and taught public school (8th Grade English) for 4 years. Adopted two mixed-race children (girl and boy). Spent a year ill and unemployed then began working for 25 years with mentally and multiply challenged folks in State institutions. Divorced after 25 years (amicably), endured 4 years of bachelorhood, then married wife Number 2. (Both fine women, by the way.) Retired for five years then got a part-time college instructor position, teaching Freshmen how to write at the college level for another five years, then retired a second time. Still with wife No. 2.
My first identity was as an artist. Later, also became a writer. Wrote about about nine multi-volumed science-fantasy novel manuscripts. Was given very encouraging rejections by editiors, but just never seemed to be what met their publishing needs. Gave up art (pastel pencils and fine-line ink drawings, mostly) for about 10 years due to operations on wrists that messed up coordination in fingers and created involuntary releases of my grasp. (It's very discouraging to spent 40 hours on a fine-line ink drawing only to drop the pen on it in the last hour or two.) Finally decided that avenue of expression was no longer viable for me and concentrated by creative efforts into writing. Then, about four years ago, I discovered the worlds of Bryce, Poser, and Vue and have been able to go back to my first love; art.
My association with Renderosity has been wonderful. In my gallery I get to combine both my creative loves: writing and art. I appreciate very much the responses and comments of viewers and thank those special few who keep comming back to my gallery. Interests in no particular order: 3D Graphic arts, writing (poetry and novels), photography, science-fiction and fantasy, science in general, astronomy (especially Mars and extra solar planets), ecology.
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Comments (8)
colas
wonderful modelling,really.good rendering to on alls the faces.i vote.bravo my friend.
ITAK
Very interesting project! I like design!
RETIRED
I like! Neat clean + well thought out design. Would there be enough oxy in the atmosphere to support combustion at any kind of altitude much above surface level? This would be my top fantasy scenario - a low level flight over the surface. :-)
kjer_99
Yes, Retired, it would be a low-level machine. For one thing, the Martian atmosphere is much lower than Earth's. As you once pointed out to me, Mons Olympus rears beyond the atmosphere. You might be able to get this baby to the bottom of that volcano, but maybe not much higher than its base. I want to add solar panels for power and probably jets won't work. Maybe electric engines turning huge propellers. Not sure just how high these babies would go, but they ought to be able to cover most of the planet, except for the higher parts of the Tharsis bulge (Where Olympus Mons and three other large volcanoes are located.) Thanks for the input. Very helpful.
eres
Excellent artwork! Hope to see this one in a scene soon!
servo
The design is aesthetically pleasing, and I understand the concept of redundancy in multiple lift bags, but it seems like 4 spheres leaves a lot of wasted space in your infrastructure. What if the redundant lift bags were oblong, and fit together with less empty area between? Just theorizing from an engineering standpoint...
melevos
Wow!Excellent!
Django
Well thought up construction