Gustav Brock
gustav at cactus.dk
Tue Jan 28 01:17:02 CST 2014
Hi all If you have Visual Studio at hand, why not start with that and its own Blend? It is in fact quite powerful. Here you can spend some hours with these videos for free: http://blog.jerrynixon.com/2014/01/the-most-comprehensive-blend-for-visual.html I've never succeeded getting familiar with Blend, so that's what I will do. /gustav -----Oprindelig meddelelse----- Fra: dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] På vegne af Salakhetdinov Shamil Sendt: 24. januar 2014 13:08 Til: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues Emne: Re: [dba-Tech] Want to be an animator? Hi Jim -- AFAIS Blender is written using C, C++ and Python. Great. See also: https://developer.blender.org/ http://nicholasbishop.net/?page_id=20 BTW, Blender's author Nicholas Bishop seems to be also working on/for http://www.makerbot.com/makerware/ Thank you. -- Shamil Tuesday, January 21, 2014 10:30 PM -07:00 from Jim Lawrence <accessd at shaw.ca>: >Hi All: > >Until fairly recently, (about a year ago) there was not a great OS animation application. > >If you were in the business you would have to purchase such applications as Studiomax, XSI, Render and so on...not inexpensive to say the least. The problem was that not just one of the programs would allow a designer to create industry standards results...you would generally have to buy a suite of up to six products. > >Five years of university, to acquire a degree in arts and animation and then a potential ten grand worth of applications...not to mention the cost of the computer...the years of BYOD(?) If you went to work for an animation company, not everyone has the budget of Pixar (or the huge team of programmers), you would have to hope they could afford the latest product site licenses...many companies just can not afford to keep the development software current. > >Now there is just such an application for those of you who are starting in the business or just want to start your own contract animation studio. > >http://www.blender.org > >The application runs on all major platforms, 32 and 64bit. > >Here is a demoreel sample on what you could build using Blender: > >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XZGulDxz9o > >Jim