Iwant to create the inside of a church for a level in my game and I have a jpeg picture of a church window (see attachments).
My goal is to include this window into my level and have the inside of the church illuminated through this window. This should result in a very nice atmosphere and colorful light effects.
The problem is: I have no idea how to achieve this or what steps are necessary.
Could anyone point me into the right direction?
unfortunately you may have to make a custom shader to use a colored image. cookies only work as an alpha channel
all i did on this was approximate the light color in the light. an easy way to do that is to take the window image into photoshop and blur it. that will give you a good idea of what the color should be.
The only thing I am a little confused about, is how you managed to get the colors into the cookie. I know light cookies are just black and white, but your example clearly shows that in the bottom corners your have greenish colors while the overall color is more reddish.
Did you use three cookies, one for each color? Or is there a better way to achieve this?
i used that colored texture material as an emissive light in the baking part. the colors are really only showing through where it is closest to the window and maybe sometimes a few photons will go in other places as well. you can also make the light map resolution higher on the floor around your windows. but youll have to cut up the floor unless you arent worried about memory.
Thank you very much!
This property was simply hidden behind the little options wheel!
After finally finding that and baking the scene, it looks like the example you created.
Again, thank you very much for your hints!
I will post a picture as soon as the result is really great, right now I am still fine-tuning the baking parameters.
I am a pastor of a small church tasked with setting of a live streaming system. I am trying to build something we can grow into and was recommended using a GSM4210p. We want to use the switch to power and connect cameras to a computer and to send audio/video signal to monitors. I am setting up the equipment at my home to test before connecting to the router at the church building.
The point is that most modern desktop OS will automatically use a ZeroConf address from this
169.254.0.0/12 network (unless there is a DHCP server or it's configured to a static address), so there is typically nothing to configure. Check the adapter IP address at this point - you can direct launch a Web browser and access the switch as shown on this 169.254.100.100 default IP and the QSG.
First, the M4250 support page provides an Installation Guide which explains how to setup your PC/Windows/IPv4 static IP address in your case. When you enter 169.254.100.201 as new static IP address in our Windows TCP/IPv4 settings, maybe enter Tab after typing 169.254.100.201, or enter manually 255.255.0.0 in the next subnet mask field. Then click OK/Apply, you can let all other fields blank, it doesn't matter here.
Second, we have a video explaining all possibilities for logging to the GUI out of the box, with or without DHCP server. This is M4300, but from this perspective M4250 is exactly the same. We show the static IP setting above, live: =oUKgRDC6NWQ
Now, there is no worries at all if you need hands-on help, we are here to help. Please send an email to
ProAV...@netgear.com and ask if someone can call you back, explaining that you can't access the GUI/IP address of your new M4250 switch from your browser. I am sure that a member of our great US team will contact you asap.
Hey, my name is Taylor Doeand I'm the co-founder of Notebird,which is software helping churches trackand organize pastoral care.And we have some exciting news.We've built an integrationwith Church Windows and, and what does that mean?What's an integration? An integration is a way for datato sync between two different software tools.And so now you can sync your church windows membership datainto Notebird.And why is that important? Why is that great?Well, with Notebird, you can access your church membershipcontact information like cell phone, email address,home address people's names from any device on your mobiledevice, on your tablet,on your laptop at the church computer.If you're in the office. If you're out of the office,you can access your Church Windows membership data fromanywhere that you have, internet.
What's also great is that Notebird helps churches trackand organize pastoral care, like I said, so you're ableto take notes on the interactionsthat you're having with your people.You can assign follow up tasks to your care teamor your staff to follow up with congregants.Uh, and then lastly is to track big life milestonesso you can track the passing of a loved oneor, uh, different life milestones that you,your church wants to track.You can do that all within Notebird with our really easyto use interface.So we'd love for you to explore more down below,we have more information.You can watch a full demo on what Notebird does as wellas a help document to help you set up this integrationor this sync between Church Windows.We really look forward to connectingand learning more about your church and your ministry.Once again, my name is Taylor.I'm the co-founder here at Notebird,and I look forward to connecting soon.
Quelea is a free, open-source, multi-lingual lyric projection software for churches with various import options. You can easily migrate your existing content to Quela from other software such as EasyWorship, OpenLP, and OpenSong, and it supports Windows, Mac, and Linux.
It supports multiple file formats such as presentations, PowerPoint slides, PDF, Impress, etc., and offers video background support to add an extra appeal to your presentation. You can also record all your sermons and services using the free platform.
*Free as in free to use but after a month, a banner will appear at the bottom of the software, (control screen only, the display screen is left untouched) reminding you that you have been using Song of Songs and urging you do donate, which will remote the banner forever.
Despite being free, VideoPsalm offers various features with a customizable MS Office-inspired user interface. It supports displaying Bible verses, song lyrics, PowerPoint presentations, PDFs, picture slideshows, videos, and image galleries.
Holyrics is mainly used for organizing and presenting slide shows and bible verses in worship and events. It seamlessly displays lyrics and verses and supports the VLC media player to play the audio and video in the presentation.
Freeshow is a free, open-source presentation platform that anyone can use. Like other tools mentioned in this list, Freeshow allows you to create a presentation with lyrics, videos, images, etc., which makes it a good fit for engaging church presentations.
It has built-in integration support for Dropbox (file sharing), Planning Center (worship planning tool), and SongSelect (song database). If you need support, their documentation is extensive, and they have a dedicated knowledge base app for iOS and Android to help with common technical issues.
It has advanced video editing features allowing you to crop and zoom videos dynamically from within the software. As for slides, ProPresenter allows you to control backgrounds, live video layers, slides, props, and masks independently.
The user interface is multilingual and comes with an iOS/Android remote. It has cloud integration for saving and sharing content and a built-in Twitter wall feature, allowing you to curate and display Twitter posts.
EasyWorship, a Windows-only church presentation software, focuses on being powerful, yet simple worship presentation software. Their user interface is clean and easy, with intuitive tabs for selecting songs, scriptures, media, presentations and themes.
They have a flexible licensing solution, letting you choose between two subscription types. EasyWorship supports Alpha Channel, NewTek Tricaster AirSend, Blackmagic, and NewTek NDI for broadcasting.
You create playlists of these components, which you can package and transfer to another computer. It integrates with the Bibles of the BibleGateway website, and you can import songs and CCLI formatted files. Like other worship software, you can also instantly display popup alerts and notifications.
Big Screen is split into two sections; the admin section and the control surface. The control surface is the interface to present your media. You can add songs, videos, images, timers, and Bible scriptures to playlists and save them in your online library.
When presenting, multiple new browser windows will be created for each of the screens connected to your computer. You will then have to drag the window to the correct screen. This can make it a bit clunky, but if Big Screen otherwise meets your requirements, it might be worth a compromise.
The biggest difference between the Free and Pro versions is that the latter includes licensed Bibles, comes with a SongSelect integration, and features website projection, live Twitter feeds, and Google Slides support.
It has built-in editors with tools for colorization, hue adjustments, blurs, hinges, reflections, image masking, overlay, and more. You can sync your content to your cloud account at Dropbox, Google Drive, or Microsoft OneDrive.
Worship Him, a church presentation software for Windows, comes in a Lite and Power edition, with the major difference being that the Lite edition only supports one projector feed. In contrast, the Power edition supports up to five.
It has 13 Bible versions and a large selection of video backgrounds, stills, hymns, and graphics. It supports Windows Vista and up. You can try it by downloading the free trial version of Worship Him, which is fully functional but only includes a sample of the graphics and Bible versions.
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