bascule Posted March 19, 2008 Posted March 19, 2008 In memory of Arthur C. Clarke's recent death, I would like to post his excellent program on fractals. He considers them one of the most beautiful and remarkable discoveries in the entire history of mathematics: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8570098277666323857 This program explores the far-reaching implications that fractals have both in mathematics and in our daily lives, and interviews a number of highly reputed mathematicians about the nature of fractals and the immense applications they could have in our daily lives. It feels a bit dated now, but still... excellent!
Daecon Posted March 31, 2008 Posted March 31, 2008 I was hoping for a program for fractals. Where you can type an equation and it will show you what the resulting fractal would look like. (Along with pre-programmed fractals to look at like the Mandelbrot set, etc.)
the tree Posted March 31, 2008 Posted March 31, 2008 I've tried to stream this a gazzilion times, I guess it's not just going to work for me. Bah.
iNow Posted March 31, 2008 Posted March 31, 2008 It's worth it if you can check it out somehow... somewhere... Maybe at school or a friends place?
bascule Posted April 2, 2008 Author Posted April 2, 2008 I was hoping for a program for fractals. Try XaoS
Daecon Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 I downloaded XaoS for windows and unzipped it but it's just a load of unrecognised file formats.
bascule Posted April 4, 2008 Author Posted April 4, 2008 Cool. It's like looking at the Universe. If you like that you should check out Electric Sheep
the tree Posted April 6, 2008 Posted April 6, 2008 Woo finally got to watch it, thankyou for linking to it.
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