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IDeviant — Boiler room

Published: 2009-05-13 12:24:23 +0000 UTC; Views: 1087; Favourites: 17; Downloads: 0
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Description #6 in the extensive series 'The new DJs'. Resumed (exhumed?) after a long rest (burial?)

Always good to link with a fan too
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Comments: 14

Lupsiberg [2009-12-22 23:56:29 +0000 UTC]

Amazing work

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Fiery-Fire [2009-09-07 09:36:51 +0000 UTC]

Loving it !!! reminds me of barnsley formulas in uf, simple and clean great use of perspective illusion

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bluesman219 [2009-06-27 05:23:49 +0000 UTC]

I'd would ask mhowm you did this but I would just get lost. Industrial creativity.

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IDeviant In reply to bluesman219 [2009-06-29 08:07:12 +0000 UTC]

The basic idea isn't difficult: a disc-julian, replacing the julian with wedge-julia and using a fan2 xform linked from the the disc (all with the obligatory polar final xform). But the particular form only emerged from much fiddling with variables and xaos.

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bluesman219 In reply to IDeviant [2009-06-29 16:05:16 +0000 UTC]

I started getting lost right after "isn't difficult"
I'm more of an experimenter, you know the Tech end of it
much better than I do. I want to change that. Hell, I'm retired
I got time!!
I'll note you soon.

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silverb [2009-05-16 17:24:26 +0000 UTC]

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zweeZwyy [2009-05-14 22:31:26 +0000 UTC]

Another challenge........ this one's got me down in the engine room with a very big spanner

... Very impressive Ian. ...

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IDeviant In reply to zweeZwyy [2009-05-19 12:35:10 +0000 UTC]

Have you decoded my cryptic hints? If so, set the x-variable to 1 and play with the y!

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zweeZwyy In reply to IDeviant [2009-05-20 22:46:25 +0000 UTC]

Yes, I think so, being a fan!
Working on it but been a bit diverted by crackle stacks [link] - I'll get back onto it & see what evolves

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winklepickers [2009-05-13 14:05:07 +0000 UTC]

I agree with *Aspartam .

My Dad was in the Boilermakers Union back in the 60's.
He used to weld the parts together, inside them.
He came home filthy!

Well he lived to 93. Not bad.

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IDeviant In reply to winklepickers [2009-05-19 12:14:23 +0000 UTC]

They knew how to live then! These days, people practically die if the warning sign goes missing

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winklepickers In reply to IDeviant [2009-05-19 14:29:42 +0000 UTC]

He trained in the job of welding after leaving the army when he was demobbed in '45. He never had an accident but it was a hazardous job.

People now do all sorts of jobs, come and go, how can they become real professionals in any field?
Be flexible!
Work a while till your chucked, out then go on the dole until another occupation comes along that you've never done before.

The building trade is notorious here for the number of accidents that happen to workers that are straight from the job centres.

We used to live in a town that built furniture. All the region did it.
Many employees were Spanish, then Portuguese, Moroccan, then Turks. As each batch of men got to know what social protections they were entitled to, the bosses went somewhere else to find replacements, and they DID GO to find them. By lorryfulls.
They couldn't work fast enough with the safety guards on the machines, so they took them off and lost fingers, if not a hand.

That's why racists here make me mad. These immigrant men, (they couldn't bring their families at first) built France's houses and their motor industry. Now some people have the cheek to tell them to go back where they came from.

That was a rant!

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Aspartam [2009-05-13 12:37:29 +0000 UTC]

Cold but cool

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IDeviant In reply to Aspartam [2009-05-19 12:12:19 +0000 UTC]

But hot from those boilers

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