[HACKERS] C++ coding assistance request for a visualisation tool

2003-01-22 Thread Justin Clift
Hi guys,

Is there anyone here that's good with C++ and has a little bit of time
to add PostgreSQL support to a project?

There is a 4D visualisation program called Flounder:

http://www.enel.ucalgary.ca/~vigmond/flounder/

And it does some pretty nifty stuff.  It takes in data sets (x, y, z,
time) and displays then graphically, saving them to image files if
needed, and also creating the time sequences as animations if needed.

Was looking at it from a performance tuning tool point of view.  i.e.
Testing PostgreSQL performance with a bunch of settings, then stuffing
the results into a database, and then using something like Flounder for
visualising it.

It seems pretty simple, and Flounder seems like it might be the right
kind of tool for doing things like this.  Was emailing with Edward
Vigmond, the author of it, and he seems to think it'd be pretty easy to
implement too.

Now, I'm not a C++ coder, and as short of time as anyone, so I was
wondering if there is anyone here who'd be interested in helping out here.

:-)

Regards and best wishes,

Justin Clift

--
My grandfather once told me that there are two kinds of people: those
who work and those who take the credit. He told me to try to be in the
first group; there was less competition there.
- Indira Gandhi



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Re: [HACKERS] C++ coding assistance request for a visualisation tool

2003-01-22 Thread Justin Clift
Greg Copeland wrote:

Have you tried IBM's OSS visualization package yet?  Sorry, I don't seem
to recall the name of the tool off the top of my head (Data Explorer??)
but it uses OpenGL (IIRC) and is said to be able to visualize just about
anything.  Anything is said to include simple data over time to complex
medical CT scans.


Cool.

Just found it...  IBM Open Visualization Data Explorer:

http://www.research.ibm.com/dx/

Going to check it out now.  The screenshot looks *very* nice.

;-)

Regards and best wishes,

Justin Clift



Greg


On Wed, 2003-01-22 at 12:19, Justin Clift wrote:


Hi guys,

Is there anyone here that's good with C++ and has a little bit of time
to add PostgreSQL support to a project?

There is a 4D visualisation program called Flounder:

http://www.enel.ucalgary.ca/~vigmond/flounder/

And it does some pretty nifty stuff.  It takes in data sets (x, y, z,
time) and displays then graphically, saving them to image files if
needed, and also creating the time sequences as animations if needed.

Was looking at it from a performance tuning tool point of view.  i.e.
Testing PostgreSQL performance with a bunch of settings, then stuffing
the results into a database, and then using something like Flounder for
visualising it.

It seems pretty simple, and Flounder seems like it might be the right
kind of tool for doing things like this.  Was emailing with Edward
Vigmond, the author of it, and he seems to think it'd be pretty easy to
implement too.

Now, I'm not a C++ coder, and as short of time as anyone, so I was
wondering if there is anyone here who'd be interested in helping out here.

:-)

Regards and best wishes,

Justin Clift



--
My grandfather once told me that there are two kinds of people: those
who work and those who take the credit. He told me to try to be in the
first group; there was less competition there.
- Indira Gandhi


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Re: [HACKERS] C++ coding assistance request for a visualisation tool

2003-01-22 Thread Justin Clift
Justin Clift wrote:

Greg Copeland wrote:


Have you tried IBM's OSS visualization package yet?  Sorry, I don't seem
to recall the name of the tool off the top of my head (Data Explorer??)
but it uses OpenGL (IIRC) and is said to be able to visualize just about
anything.  Anything is said to include simple data over time to complex
medical CT scans.



Cool.

Just found it...  IBM Open Visualization Data Explorer:

http://www.research.ibm.com/dx/


That seems to be a very outdated page for it.  The new pages for it (in 
case anyone else is interested) are at:

http://www.opendx.org

:-)

Regards and best wishes,

Justin Clift


--
My grandfather once told me that there are two kinds of people: those
who work and those who take the credit. He told me to try to be in the
first group; there was less competition there.
- Indira Gandhi


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