At 07:15 AM 5/20/2006, Robert G. Brown wrote:
On Fri, 19 May 2006, philip wrote:

I may call respower and see how far into their brains they'll let me "pick"
to see if the nodes are linux.  What do you guys think?

since this is the only way this has ever been done for
serious movies from the beginning.

At least since Toy Story, if not before.


This may cause you to completely change your toplevel software from max
to something else -- it usually isn't worth your time to graft two
fundamentally different or incompatible packages or approaches together
unless there is already a community working on it (often there is), or
you are a programming god and can start your own community, or you enjoy
pain.  (Hey, there are clearly people that DO enjoy pain or Windows
wouldn't even exist, right?:-)

Perhaps they get paid to tolerate the pain?
And, in some environments, it's easier to use Windows than anything else. Certainly, if I had to develop a bunch of form based applications using back end webservices which I'd also have to develop, the Windows platform makes things fairly easy, mostly because the development environment hides all the icky-ness of the API.


Some of what you might end up with will cost you money for software or
software support -- this is a "professional grade" application and the
free software just may not hold its own with the closed source software
available.  However, don't write off free -- there are old, mature
projects out there in the specific area of rendering (see e.g.

  http://www.povray.org/

that have numerous film credits to their name and that are already
ported to run using MPI and/or PVM and/or frame distribution tools.
I've used it to make graphics for papers and presentations myself --
very cool.

But.. if you want state of the art "production quality" things like flapping capes on Superman, natural looking hair on Sully, etc., you're probably going to use whatever platform supports the modeling tools you need. It IS true that a lot of the underlying algorithms get initially developed in a *nix world, but by the time they get integrated into a production suite, the choice is more driven by whatever the users are currently familiar with, and if that's windows, that's what it will get ported to.


I'd love it if you'd publish a review of what you learn and what you end
up selecting back to the list to help others that might be asking these
questions in the future (and to enlighten those of us on list who don't
know exactly how this all works except in very general terms).

   rgb


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