安装 Steam
登录
|
语言
繁體中文(繁体中文)
日本語(日语)
한국어(韩语)
ไทย(泰语)
български(保加利亚语)
Čeština(捷克语)
Dansk(丹麦语)
Deutsch(德语)
English(英语)
Español-España(西班牙语 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙语 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希腊语)
Français(法语)
Italiano(意大利语)
Bahasa Indonesia(印度尼西亚语)
Magyar(匈牙利语)
Nederlands(荷兰语)
Norsk(挪威语)
Polski(波兰语)
Português(葡萄牙语 - 葡萄牙)
Português-Brasil(葡萄牙语 - 巴西)
Română(罗马尼亚语)
Русский(俄语)
Suomi(芬兰语)
Svenska(瑞典语)
Türkçe(土耳其语)
Tiếng Việt(越南语)
Українська(乌克兰语)
报告翻译问题






In the meantime, check out these SBS images (StereoPhoto Maker helps you out): https://www.dropbox.com/sh/ubwrjbvjddz3ome/AAA6vMeALEiT5STtvs0mppSHa?dl=0
Was there life? Water means life. Was there water? Sediments mean water. Yes there was life..
This is where Elon is heading? There is only DEATH nothing more to see.
-es una pasada....!!! es de los mejores modelos del curiosity que he visto
I've since seen an interesting addon for the free Blender, capable of generating smaller Martian terrain from NASA-generated depth maps:
https://github.com/phaseIV/Blender-Navcam-Importer
I haven't had a chance to play with it, but it looks pretty interesting.
In particular the other 'go to mars' games should be ashamed^h^h^h^h^h paying attention. I don't need cool spaceships or narration, or watered-down tutorials. This is the real deal, and the added info is on point and unobtrusive. NASA should be distributing this.
Bravo!