Cosmos Minimus Mac OS

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Minimus is a GUI frontend for Yahoo’s YUI Compressor. Instead of using inconvenient and slow websites to compress your JavaScript and CSS, you can do it right on your Mac.

While emulation of the Azure Cosmos DB service is faithful, the emulator's implementation is different than the service. For example, the emulator uses standard OS components such as the local file system for persistence, and the HTTPS protocol stack for connectivity.

Add files to the queue by dropping them on the Dock icon (or by using the File menu) and press the Minify button to start the process. In no time at all, copies with a .min.js or .min.css extension will appear alongside the originals.

Minimus is a free download, but donations are appreciated if you find the app useful. Requires Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard.

  1. Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, Windows: FEATool Multiphysics: MATLAB FEM and PDE multiphysics simulation toolbox: Precise Simulation: 1.10: 2019-05-17: Proprietary EULA: Free for personal use: Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, Unix: FreeFEM: FreeFEM is a free and open-source parallel FEA software for multiphysics simulations.
  2. Introducing Cosmos Cosmos (C# Open Source Managed Operating System) is an operating system development kit which uses Visual Studio as its development environment. Despite C# in the name any.NET based language can be used including VB.NET, Fortran, Delphi Prism, IronPython, F# and more.

features

sky

  • default catalogue of over 600,000 stars
  • extra catalogues with more than 177 million stars
  • default catalogue of over 80,000 deep-sky objects
  • extra catalogue with more than 1 million deep-sky objects
  • asterisms and illustrations of the constellations
  • constellations for 20+ different cultures
  • images of nebulae (full Messier catalogue)
  • realistic Milky Way
  • very realistic atmosphere, sunrise and sunset
  • the planets and their satellites

Cosmos Minimus Mac Os Catalina

interface

  • a powerful zoom
  • time control
  • multilingual interface
  • fisheye projection for planetarium domes
  • spheric mirror projection for your own low-cost dome
  • all new graphical interface and extensive keyboard control
  • telescope control

visualisation

  • equatorial and azimuthal grids
  • star twinkling
  • shooting stars
  • tails of comets
  • iridium flares simulation
  • eclipse simulation
  • supernovae and novae simulation
  • 3D sceneries
  • skinnable landscapes with spheric panorama projection
Cosmos Minimus Mac OS

customizability

  • plugin system adding artifical satellites, ocular simulation, telescope control and more
  • ability to add new solar system objects from online resources...
  • add your own deep sky objects, landscapes, constellation images, scripts...

news

system requirements

minimal

  • Linux/Unix; Windows 7 and above; Mac OS X 10.12.0 and above
  • 3D graphics card which supports OpenGL 3.0 and GLSL 1.3 or OpenGL ES 2.0
  • 512 MiB RAM
  • 420 MiB on disk
  • Keyboard
  • Mouse, Touchpad or similar pointing device

recommended

Mac Os Download

  • Linux/Unix; Windows 7 and above; Mac OS X 10.12.0 and above
  • 3D graphics card which supports OpenGL 3.3 and above
  • 1 GiB RAM or more
  • 1.5 GiB on disk
  • Keyboard
  • Mouse, Touchpad or similar pointing device

developers

Project coordinator: Fabien Chéreau
Graphic designer: Johan Meuris, Martín Bernardi
Developer: Alexander Wolf, Guillaume Chéreau, Georg Zotti, Marcos Cardinot
Continuous Integration: Hans Lambermont
Tester: Khalid AlAjaji
and everyone else in the community.

social media

collaborate

You can learn more about Stellarium, get support and help the project from these links:

acknowledgment

If the Stellarium planetarium was helpful for your research work, the following acknowledgment would be appreciated:

This research has made use of the Stellarium planetarium

Mac

Zotti, G., Hoffmann, S. M., Wolf, A., Chéreau, F., & Chéreau, G. (2021). The Simulated Sky: Stellarium for Cultural Astronomy Research. Journal of Skyscape Archaeology, 6(2), 221–258. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsa.17822

Or you may download the BibTeX file of the paper to create another citation format.

git

The latest development snapshot of Stellarium is kept on github. If you want to compile development versions of Stellarium, this is the place to get the source code.

supporters and friends

Stellarium is produced by the efforts of the developer team, with the help and support of the following people and organisations .