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Image

Supersizing the "Last Supper" 98

gandhi_2 writes "A pair of sibling scholars compared 52 artists' renditions of 'The Last Supper', and found that the size of the meal painted had grown through the years. Over the last millennium they found that entrees had increased by 70%, bread by 23%, and plate size by 65.6%. Their findings were published in the International Journal of Obesity. From the article: 'The apostles depicted during the Middle Ages appear to be the ascetics they are said to have been. But by 1498, when Leonardo da Vinci completed his masterpiece, the party was more lavishly fed. Almost a century later, the Mannerist painter Jacobo Tintoretto piled the food on the apostles' plates still higher.'"
Graphics

Disney Releases 3D Texture Mapper Source Code 83

dsavi writes "Ptex, Walt Disney Animation Studio's cutting-edge 3D texture mapping library which was first used on nearly every surface in the 2008 animated feature Bolt, was released under the BSD license on Friday. Quoting the announcement on monophyl.com: 'We expect to follow Ptex with other open source projects that we hope the community will find beneficial. We will soon be launching a new Walt Disney Animation Studios Technology page under disneyanimation.com. It will include links to our open source projects as will as a library of recent publications.' This looks good for open source 3D graphics."
Debian

Benchmarks of Debian GNU/kFreeBSD vs. GNU/Linux 143

An anonymous reader writes "The Debian Squeeze release is going to be accompanied by a first-rate kFreeBSD port and now early benchmarks of this port have started coming out using daily install images. The Debian GNU/kFreeBSD project is marrying the FreeBSD kernel with a GNU userland and glibc while making most of the Debian repository packages available for kfreebsd-i386 and kfreebsd-amd64. The first Debian GNU/kFreeBSD benchmarks compare the performance of it to Debian GNU/Linux with the 2.6.30 kernel while the rest of the packages are the same. Results are shown for both i386 and x86_64 flavors. Debian GNU/kFreeBSD may be running well, but it has a lot of catching up to do in terms of speed against Linux."

Comment Jan 1994 - Now get off my lawn! (Score 1) 739

It was the start of the second semester of my Freshman year at UIUC. After using the student unix machines for half a semester and getting a basic understanding of this unix thing thanks to playing and some friends on IRC, I wanted to learn more, so I figured putting it on my own machine was the way to go. (Also, too many of my dormmates kept taking over my computer to play Dune II, so it was side benefit.)

I had a 486DX 66MHz with 4 MB of RAM and a 120MB drive, and borrowed about 20 floppies from a warez friend of mine to copy slackware down to. I can't remember which version, but I do remember a .98pl kernel. Luckily, we had a net connected computer lab in our dorm, so downloading the floppies was fairly quick and painless. Well, as painless as loading up 20 floppies is. Seemed painless then, now I'd hang myself. A friend who had already been running linux for awhile helped me with some n00b questions like "What the hell does this partition stuff mean?" After a few months and getting my feet under me, I quickly upgraded to 8 MB RAM so I could run X without swapping when the mouse moved.

As others have stated in my thread, my career and computing life would have been radically different without the deeper understanding of how computers work, how to debug, how to read logs, etc that Linux helped me develop. Of course, there was a price to this knowledge, I did not get laid nearly enough at college. :)

Now I have a quad core 2.4Ghz machine with 4 GB of RAM and a 1TB harddrive. Now get off my lawn!

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