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Manpages t3dSection: User Commands (1)Updated: Version 1.1 Index Return to Main Contents NAMEt3d - clock using flying balls to display the timeSYNOPSISt3d [ options ]...DESCRIPTIONTime 3D is a clock. It uses flying balls to display the time. This balls move and wobble around to give you the impression your graphic workstation with its many XStones is doing something. t3d uses mouse and keyboard to let you fly through the balls. Hit S to speed up, A to slow down, Z to zoom in and X to zoom out. Use the left mouse button to rotate to the left and the right mouse button to rotate the view to the right. Use the middle mouse button to change the optical axis and the moving direction. 0 (zero) will stop you. Q quits. OPTIONS
AUTHORBernd Paysan Email: bernd.paysan@gmx.de Hacked on by jwz@jwz.org for xscreensaver. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTAcknowledgement to Georg Acher, who wrote the initial program displaying balls. COPYINGCopy, modify, and distribute T3D either under GPL version 2 or newer, or under the standard MIT/X license notice. DISCLAIMERT3D is not related to T3D(tm), the massive parallel Alpha--based supercomputer from Cray Research. T3D's name was invented in 1991, years before the project at Cray Research started. There is no relation from T3D to Cray's T3D, even the balls surrounding T3D on some posters weren't an inspiration for T3D. I don't know anything about the other way round. The programming style of T3D isn't intented as example of good style, but as example of how a fast prototyped demo may look like. T3D wasn't created to be useful, it was created to be nice. KNOWN BUGSThere are no known bugs in T3D. Maybe there are bugs in X. Slight changes in the T3D sources are known to show these bugs, e.g. if you remove the (int) casting at the XFillArc x,y,w,h-coordinates...
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