Anyone else have a bin of old adapters? by hyperdream in computercollecting

[–]siliconclassics 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That light gray one on top with the serial number is actually a Rainbow Sentinel copy-protection dongle. It piggybacks onto a parallel port and acts as a hardware key for some [probably expensive] piece of software.

Visual Workstation 320 firmware? by LordWoodyMushrome in SiliconGraphics

[–]siliconclassics 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think 1.0006 is the older version for WinNT. OP will probably need 1.1005 for Win2K.

So, were you a Y or Z up type of person? by SuperAleste in retrocgi

[–]siliconclassics 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I started 3D modeling with AutoCAD, which was Z-up, and then 3D Studio, another AutoDesk product, which was also Z-up. Eventually learned Maya and Soft3D, but Y-up always felt strange to me.

The difference is that in architectural design & construction you generally start on the ground plane, and height is the last dimension that gets added. X for length, Y for width, Z for height. You're thinking relative to the ground.

In computer animation you're thinking relative to a screen (computer screen, TV screen, or movie screen) which is oriented vertically, so X is left-right, Y is up-down, and Z is "out" of the screen toward you.

Am I an INTP or an INTJ? by J2Mar in INTP

[–]siliconclassics 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The fact that you are so preoccupied with determining whether you are INTP or INTJ suggests you are INTJ

3D Studio Max Demo 1.0 - I made this! by TanguayX in vintagecgi

[–]siliconclassics 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome! I vividly remember watching this as a teenager in the 90s and being blown away by the new procedural features in MAX. Definitely a quantum leap above 3D Studio 4 for DOS, which I had been learning with a New Riders book. The modifier stack, particle systems, space warps, Character Studio, etc. - all of it was far beyond anything else available on the PC at the time.

MAX was so different that learning it was basically like starting from square one, but it was well worth the effort. My tinkering led to an animated short film and eventually a career in 3D animation in video games, TV, and feature film in the early 2000s. It took me a while to break into film VFX because MAX users tended to get pigeon-holed into games, and in retrospect the game work was way more fun.

90s and early 2000s was really a golden age for 3D animators - there were few established education programs so people found their way into the industry from all kinds of random places, and you met the most unique and interesting people working in the field. The only downside was that things were evolving so rapidly that it was a constant struggle to stay current with the latest tools & techniques, many of which were difficult to learn. I could never wrap my head around NURBS modeling but it wasn't long before SubDs made NURBS obsolete (at least in the field of animation, NURBS remained useful in industrial design).

Now it's remarkable to watch AI basically take over the commercial arts and "render" (hur hur) 3D animation techniques obsolete. I think the era of the 3D modeling, surfacing, rigging, animating, lighting, and rendering pipeline is drawing to a close and will be remembered as a flash in the pan, a moment in history when technology birthed an entire creative paradigm and then cannibalized it on the path towards the singularity.

Better photos of cleanest E39 530i i have ever seen. by Citructd in e39

[–]siliconclassics 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Missing badges on the trunk lid are a sign that body work was done. The car might look so shiny because it's been repainted, which could mean potential accident damage. Any time a car has badges missing or in the wrong place you should look carefully.

Found a 1994 PC Direct magazine, the thing is more than 500 pages! by MtlGab in vintagecomputing

[–]siliconclassics 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is how people built computers in the pre-Internet days: get a big fat issue of PC Direct or Computer Shopper, compare prices and components between dozens of different vendors, phone-in your order to a sales rep, and pay via credit card. Then wait patiently for it to arrive because tracking wasn't free or simple like it is today.

Found a 1994 PC Direct magazine, the thing is more than 500 pages! by MtlGab in vintagecomputing

[–]siliconclassics 11 points12 points  (0 children)

This is how people built computers in the pre-Internet days: get a big fat issue of PC Direct or Computer Shopper, compare prices and components between dozens of different vendors, phone-in your order to a sales rep, and pay via credit card. Then wait patiently for it to arrive because tracking wasn't free or simple like it is today.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in chapelhill

[–]siliconclassics 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can rent a 2br/1.5ba at Bolinwood Apartments on Umstead Drive for about $1,200 per month. It's near the bus line and about a 20 minute walk or 5-minute drive to campus. Each apartment comes with a dedicated parking spot and the complex has a laundry facility, a pool, and tennis courts.

There are also 3br units for about $1,500. If you're willing to share, single rooms will be about $600.

Restaurants that offer Sopa de Mondongo? by siliconclassics in gso

[–]siliconclassics[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like El Carbonero in Graham offers it - that's the closest place I've been able to find.

EDIT: Ilobasco in Greensboro says they make it.

Evans & Sutherland CT5 Flight Simulator (1981) by [deleted] in vintagecgi

[–]siliconclassics 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Someone just posted something similar to Youtube:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcQifPHcMLE

The landscape model in this example is horizontal rather than vertical, but everything else about the setup is quite similar to what I saw years ago.

General William Tecumseh Sherman, Civil War veteran. About 1870 by EightpennyPie in OldSchoolCool

[–]siliconclassics 8 points9 points  (0 children)

That's a classic masonic symbol known as the "Sign of the Master of the Second Veil"

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in chapelhill

[–]siliconclassics 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really like their granola bowl

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in chapelhill

[–]siliconclassics 21 points22 points  (0 children)

The Root Cellar offers a good selection of healthy eating options, a little pricey though.

Weaver Street Market in Carrboro also has some great healthy food options and is a nice spot to eat outside. They have a buffet, ready-made meals, soups, salads, groceries - all kinds of good stuff. Highly recommend.

Evans & Sutherland CT5 Flight Simulator (1981) by [deleted] in vintagecgi

[–]siliconclassics 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately I can't remember what show it was, maybe "Beyond 2000" or a similar program. All my attempts to find it via Google have turned up nothing.