Meteoroids (AniMerrill Productions) Mac OS

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  1. Deploying a Meteor app on a Linux/Unix production server with Passenger in Apache mode on Mac OS X This page describes the deployment of a Meteor app, assuming that Passenger was installed through the following operating system configuration or installation method: Mac OS X.
  2. To their surprise, stars began to trickle down from the sky and quickly turned into a full-fledged meteor shower. Rather than disappearing, the shooting stars seemed to have taken shape, aimed at Hoshigino, and enveloped it in a warm, bright light.
Mac
This is the guide for using Meteor, a full-stack JavaScript platform for developing modern web and mobile applications.

What is Meteor?

Meteor is a full-stack JavaScript platform for developing modern web and mobile applications. Meteor includes a key set of technologies for building connected-client reactive applications, a build tool, and a curated set of packages from the Node.js and general JavaScript community.

  • Meteor allows you to develop in one language, JavaScript, in all environments: application server, web browser, and mobile device.

  • Meteor uses data on the wire, meaning the server sends data, not HTML, and the client renders it.

  • Meteor embraces the ecosystem, bringing the best parts of the extremely active JavaScript community to you in a careful and considered way.

  • Meteor provides full stack reactivity, allowing your UI to seamlessly reflect the true state of the world with minimal development effort.

Quick start

Meteor supports OS X, Windows, and Linux.

On Windows? Download the official Meteor installer here.

On OS X or Linux? Install the latest official Meteor release from your terminal:

The Windows installer supports Windows 7, Windows 8.1, Windows Server2008, and Windows Server 2012. The command line installer supports Mac OS X10.7 (Lion) and above, and Linux on x86 and x86_64 architectures.

Once you’ve installed Meteor, create a project:

Run it locally:

Meteor comes with npm bundled so that you can type meteor npm without worrying about installing it yourself. If you like, you can also use a globally installed npm to manage your packages.

Meteor resources

  1. The place to get started with Meteor is the official tutorial.

  2. Stack Overflow is the best place to ask (and answer!) technical questions. Be sure to add the meteor tag to your question.

  3. Visit the Meteor discussion forums to announce projects, get help, talk about the community, or discuss changes to core.

  4. The Meteor docs is the best place to find the core API documentation of the platform.

  5. Atmosphere is the repository of community packages designed especially for Meteor.

  6. Awesome Meteor is a community-curated list of packages and resources.

What is the Meteor Guide?

This is a set of articles outlining opinions on best-practice application development using the Meteor platform. Our aim is to cover patterns that are common to the development of all modern web and mobile applications, so many concepts documented here are not necessarily Meteor specific and could be applied to any application built with a focus on modern, interactive user interfaces.

Nothing in the Meteor guide is required to build a Meteor application—you can certainly use the platform in ways that contradict the principles and patterns of the guide. However, the guide is an attempt to document best practices and community conventions, so we hope that the majority of the Meteor community will benefit from adopting the practices documented here.

The APIs of the Meteor platform are available at the docs site, and you can browse community packages on atmosphere.

Target audience

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The guide is targeted towards intermediate developers that have some familiarity with JavaScript, the Meteor platform, and web development in general. If you are just getting started with Meteor, we recommend starting with the official tutorial.

Example app

Many articles reference the Todos example application. This code is being actively developed alongside the guide. You can see the latest source code for the app, and file issues or make suggestions via pull request at its GitHub repository.

Guide development

Contributing

Ongoing Meteor Guide development takes place in the openon GitHub. We encourage pull requests and issues to discuss problems with and changes that could be made to the content. We hope that keeping our process open and honest will make it clear what we plan to include in the guide and what changes will be coming in future Meteor versions.

Goals of the project

The decisions made and practices outlined in the guide must necessarily be opinionated. Certain best practices will be highlighted and other valid approaches ignored. We aim to reach community consensus around major decisions but there will always be other ways to solve problems when developing your application. We believe it’s important to know what the “standard” way to solve a problem is before branching out to other options. If an alternate approach proves itself superior, then it should make its way into a future version of the guide.

An important function of the guide is to shape future development in the Meteor platform. By documenting best practices, the guide shines a spotlight on areas of the platform that could be better, easier, or more performant, and thus will be used to focus a lot of future platform choices.

Similarly, gaps in the platform highlighted by the guide can often be plugged by community packages; we hope that if you see an opportunity to improve the Meteor workflow by writing a package, that you take it! If you’re not sure how best to design or architect your package, reach out on the forums and start a discussion.

Various software packages are available related to meteors and meteor data processing.

Radiant

The Radiant software calculates density distributions of meteor radiants. The disk-read procedures interpret meteor co-ordinate data in the PosDat and FIDAC formats. The user should have some basic knowledge of creating dBase files. The density distributions are gnomonically projected, thus simplifying the calculating procedures. For most radiant searches the investigated area is small enough (<20° across) that the scale change over this gnomonic chart can be neglected.

Radiant knows three methods of radiant determinations: backward tracings, intersection counts and probability distributions.

Radiant is a product which developed by its users. I would like to specially thank Malcolm J. Currie for his numerous suggestions, Andre Knofel for testing the current version and setting up the FIDAC file structure, Ralf Koschack for mathematical ideas and the analysis of plotting and velocity errors, Luis R. Bellot for modifying the angular speed formula, Detlef Koschny for setting up the PosDat file structure and many more.

For Windows Vista and Windows 7 users only: Radiant is a 16-bit DOS program and as such you will not be able to run it even from the command prompt, you would get an error message: “This system does not support fullscreen mode. Choose ‘Close’ to terminate the application.” Changing compatibility settings in the properties window of the RAD14.exe file won’t help you either. There is still a simple and comfortable solution for this problem by installing the DOSBox program, which emulates DOS and thus lets you run 16-bit DOS programs. DOSBox is a freeware and can be downloaded from its official website; its installation process is quite simple and doesn’t require any further explanation here. Note: You will NOT need DOSBox for running the Project Editor, you can run it directly from the Windows Explorer.

Download Radiant v1.45 (author Rainer Arlt)

MetRec

Meteoroids (animerrill Productions) Mac Os Version

MetRec (Meteor Recognizer) is a software package for the automatic detection and analysis of video meteors. It can be used both to inspect video tapes/DVD offline, and to do online recognition for an automated video system.

MetRec analyses in real-time half resolution grey scale PAL (384×288 pixel, 8 bit) or NTSC (320×240 pixel, 8 bit) video frames at rates up to 25/30 frames per second. It stores the appearance time of meteors and optionally a number of frames and a sum image from each event. MetRec is able to compute the meteor brightness, its velocity and equatorial coordinates. The software calculates the limiting magnitude and the size of the field of view covered by the camera. It is able to determine the meteor shower on the fly, and the flux density for each meteor shower.

The software is highly flexible – it can be adapted to each individual system with a number of parameters to be set in a configuration file. All output is written into a logfile. During recognition, the current input signal, preliminary results of the recognition process (e.g. mean subtracted image, regions of interest, segmented and identified stars, …) and the system state are displayed at the monitor.

MetRec runs only on 32 bit OS or lower (DOS, Win98, Win XP, Win 7). Check the MetRec homepage for more information and downloads. MetRec can be downloaded from this site. You have to choice to download the individual program files for DOS, Win XP, and Win7 or ZIP archives MetRec53Dos.zip (16.1 MB) / MetRec53WinXP.zip (8.2 MB) / MetRec53Win7.zip (192 MB) which include the full software package in compressed format. The history file informs you about the latest software changes.

QRicht

QRicht provides you with all required information to aim your cameras for double-station observations based on the observation time, the geographic coordinates of 2, 3 or 4 stations, the height in the atmosphere of the aiming point and the geographic coordinates of the aiming point in the atmosphere.

QRicht runs on 16 bit machines. If you are interested in a 32 bit version, please contact Marc de Lignie.

Download:

  • QRicht 16Bits (author Marc de Lignie)
  • QRicht 32Bits (Windows & Mac) (compiled by Alex Georoceanu)

UFOCapture

Meteoroids (animerrill Productions) Mac Os Catalina

UFOCapture is a motion capture software that starts recording on a hard disk drive of a computer from a few seconds before the action recognized to a few seconds after the action finished. UFOCapture is software for Microsoft Windows and it is easy to build a satisfying observation system by using various video capture equipments on the market.

After UFOCapture was first published in 2003, UFOCapture V2 is now available refined by users’ requests and advices on summer of 2005. Fantastic luminous phenomena have been captured using UFOCapture such as meteors, Fireballs, Sprites, Elves, and Blue Jets, and much more unknown phenomena are waiting to be discovered.

UFOAnalyzer, which calculates precise direction and elevation of the event and UFOOrbit that gets an orbit by a fireball observed by more than two sites, are also available and very useful to precede the captured events.

VisDat

VISDAT is a system for recording and evaluating visual meteor observations. The first version was developed in 1991 by Thomas Rattei and later by Janko F. Richter (both Astroclub Radebeul e.V. Germany).

Download VisDat (author Janko F. Richter/T. Rattei)

AstroRecord

The Astro Record program is aimed at making position measurements of celestial objects, especially meteors, and performing the associate astrometric calculations. For this purpose screen coordinates of the object and of a number of reference stars can be measured, equatorial coordinates of the reference stars can be looked up, and the results of the astrometric calculations can be analyzed regarding wrong star identifications and plate defects.

Meteoroids (AniMerrill Productions) Mac OS

The results are stored as an output file that can be used for either the Turner or Redsky astrometric computer programs in use within the Dutch Meteor Society. In addition, the equatorial coordinates (equinox J2000.0) of the meteor’s begin and end point are stored in a log file that can easily be converted to the PosDat format used by the International Meteor Organization.

The program can handle images in the Windows Device Independent Bitmap Format (*.BMP), Kodak Photo CD format (*.PCD) or Video for Windows format (*.AVI). For obtaining the equatorial coordinates the program uses the Sky Catalogue 2000.0, Vol. 1, second edition,1991 (c), sold by The Sky Publishing Corporation. The entering of equatorial coordinates is eased by the possibility of specifying a constellation name and Flamsteed number. From the fourth star on the program predicts the most probable star from a list of possible stars, based upon the previous measurements.

For the astrometric calculations the equatorial coordinates are converted into so-called direction cosines and expressed as a polynomial function of the screen coordinates x and y (Turner’s method). The user can choose between a first, second or third order fit. A third order fit can compensate for the most common image distortions due to camera and projection lenses, Photo CD production, optical scanning, image intensifiers, etc.

AstroRecord runs on 16 bit machines. If you are interested in a 32 bit version, please contact Marc de Lignie.

Download AstroRecord (author Marc de Lignie)

MetShow

The MetShow meteor planetarium software is runningon Windows operating systems. The program can help meteor observers to prepare and evaluate their observations. MetShow is based on the 2017 IMO Working List of Meteor Showers (J. Rendtel, 2016), with addition of some meteor showers from the 2006 IMO Meteor Shower Calendar. The software produces the following information for the active showers on a given date:

  • star charts with radiants
  • moon phase
  • moonrise and moonset
  • sunrise and sunset
  • solar longitude (J2000)
  • other astronomical circumstances
  • ZHR calculation
  • Lunar impact conditions

Suggestions for improvements or new features can be sent to Peter Zimnikoval.

Download MetShow (author Peter Zimnikoval)

Radio Meteor Software

Yagimax

Meteoroids (animerrill Productions) Mac Os Update

This program permits the calculation of the performance of Yagi antennas. It runs under MS-DOS.

Meteor Prediction

This is a program of radio amateurs for the prediction of meteor scatter. We don’t know its reliability, and there is no documentation in the package. It runs under MS-DOS

Meteor v4.0 & Colorgramme

Software for meteor detection and visualisation of observations. Can be found at http://radio.meteor.free.fr/.

EZNEC Antenna Software

EZNEC and EZNEC+ are powerful but very easy-to-use programs for modeling and analyzing nearly any kind of antenna in its actual operating environment. EZNEC plots azimuth and elevation patterns; tells you gain, feedpoint impedance, SWR, and current distribution; finds and reports beamwidth, 3-dB pattern points, f/b ratio, takeoff angle, sidelobe characteristics; and more. All information, including patterns, can be displayed on screen or printed on any Windows compatible printer. Can be found at http://www.eznec.com/.

Meteoroids (animerrill Productions) Mac Os 7

Miscellaneous Software

  • CooReader (author Marek Samujllo)
    measuring visual meteor plots
  • MetSim (author Sirko Molau) is a meteor storm simulation. The goal of this simple program is to test how good you are in estimating the meteor count under exceptional rates, and to train yourself for such an event. Beside that, it is simply fun to watch the display of an artificial meteor storm. MetSim runs under 16 bit OS (Dos, Win98) only. However, the readme file contains instructions how MetSim runs easily with the DOS emulator DosBox on any Windows version.
  • Between 2001 and 2004, Marco Langbroek wrote (sometimes with the help of Marc de Lignie and Casper ter Kuile) a number of MS Excel applications for various types of calculations relating to meteor astronomy. Most of it relates to meteor orbits. Among them is a spreadsheet which allows you to calculate orbital elements from a (geocentric) meteor radiant position and speed.