I used Blender 3D. Rendering time was short, less than 2 min.
This is because I used some tricks.
It seems more appropriate for a wallpaper.
See bellow:

Find more about my work are here:
Activities_within_Fedora
tutorials, tips, tricks, commands, programming, linux, windows, database, sql, python, programming language, Fedora, drawing, painting, tutorial, tutorials
from xml.dom import minidom as dom import urllib def fetchPage(url): a = urllib.urlopen(url) return ''.join(a.readlines()) def extract(page): a = dom.parseString(page) item2 = a.getElementsByTagName('SendingDate')[0].firstChild.wholeText print "DATA ",item2 item = a.getElementsByTagName('Cube') for i in item: if i.hasChildNodes() == True: e = i.getElementsByTagName('Rate')[10].firstChild.wholeText d = i.getElementsByTagName('Rate')[26].firstChild.wholeText print "EURO ",e print "DOLAR ",d if __name__=='__main__': page = fetchPage("http://www.bnro.ro/nbrfxrates.xml") extract(page)
for (( i=1; i<10; i++ )); do echo data$i > data[$i]x[$i].txt;done
$ ls data[1]x[1].txt data[3]x[3].txt data[5]x[5].txt data[7]x[7].txt data[9]x[9].txt data[2]x[2].txt data[4]x[4].txt data[6]x[6].txt data[8]x[8].txt
$ for i in *[]x[]*; do mv -v "$i" "$(echo $i | sed 's/[]x[]//')"; done `data[1]x[1].txt' -> `data1]x[1].txt' `data[2]x[2].txt' -> `data2]x[2].txt' `data[3]x[3].txt' -> `data3]x[3].txt' `data[4]x[4].txt' -> `data4]x[4].txt' `data[5]x[5].txt' -> `data5]x[5].txt' `data[6]x[6].txt' -> `data6]x[6].txt' `data[7]x[7].txt' -> `data7]x[7].txt' `data[8]x[8].txt' -> `data8]x[8].txt' `data[9]x[9].txt' -> `data9]x[9].txt' [work@test work]$ for i in *[]x[]*; do mv -v "$i" "$(echo $i | sed 's/[]x[]//')"; done `data1]x[1].txt' -> `data1x[1].txt' `data2]x[2].txt' -> `data2x[2].txt' `data3]x[3].txt' -> `data3x[3].txt' `data4]x[4].txt' -> `data4x[4].txt' `data5]x[5].txt' -> `data5x[5].txt' `data6]x[6].txt' -> `data6x[6].txt' `data7]x[7].txt' -> `data7x[7].txt' `data8]x[8].txt' -> `data8x[8].txt' `data9]x[9].txt' -> `data9x[9].txt' [work@test work]$ for i in *[]x[]*; do mv -v "$i" "$(echo $i | sed 's/[]x[]//')"; done `data1x[1].txt' -> `data1[1].txt' `data2x[2].txt' -> `data2[2].txt' `data3x[3].txt' -> `data3[3].txt' `data4x[4].txt' -> `data4[4].txt' `data5x[5].txt' -> `data5[5].txt' `data6x[6].txt' -> `data6[6].txt' `data7x[7].txt' -> `data7[7].txt' `data8x[8].txt' -> `data8[8].txt' `data9x[9].txt' -> `data9[9].txt' [work@test work]$ for i in *[]x[]*; do mv -v "$i" "$(echo $i | sed 's/[]x[]//')"; done `data1[1].txt' -> `data11].txt' `data2[2].txt' -> `data22].txt' `data3[3].txt' -> `data33].txt' `data4[4].txt' -> `data44].txt' `data5[5].txt' -> `data55].txt' `data6[6].txt' -> `data66].txt' `data7[7].txt' -> `data77].txt' `data8[8].txt' -> `data88].txt' `data9[9].txt' -> `data99].txt' [work@test work]$ for i in *[]x[]*; do mv -v "$i" "$(echo $i | sed 's/[]x[]//')"; done `data11].txt' -> `data11.txt' `data22].txt' -> `data22.txt' `data33].txt' -> `data33.txt' `data44].txt' -> `data44.txt' `data55].txt' -> `data55.txt' `data66].txt' -> `data66.txt' `data77].txt' -> `data77.txt' `data88].txt' -> `data88.txt' `data99].txt' -> `data99.txt'
>>> import geo
>>> geo.adress("Santa Claus")
{'status': '200', 'latitude': '32.1715776', 'longitude': '-82.3315138', 'accuracy': '4'}
package main import "fmt" func main() { fmt.Printf("Hello, 世界\n") }One of the text comments I found is:
Is the first multi-button application mouse designed for a wide variety of software applications.
The OOMouse supports Windows, Linux, and Macintosh operating systems.
The features of the OOMouse include: