Max Me Out a Second Time
After our recent article about Max-T, we received quite a few questions and comments from readers. We passed the questions on to Mike Hughes, V.P. Business Development at Max-T, who took a moment to respond. In this evolving world of shared storage in the post production environment, comparisons between various solutions can quickly become complex. Mike Seymour takes a closer look in this Q&A session…..
ReadPainter IX Test Drive
Photoshop has made major gains in reproducing brushes, and it is the cornerstone of most digi-matte departments. Does Painter still have role to play? Is Painter just a weekend app, or can it reposition itself?
Corel has moved to make Painter a more professionally focused tool for concept art, matte paintings and illustration work, in so doing they are moving away from the “Santa Fe” casual artist. Fxguide took version IX for a road test and spoke to
ReadStoned and Wired: Behind Discreet’s Y2k+4 bug
“It was clear from the look on their faces – that they weren’t joking… we knew we had a global problem, that’s when we hit the panic button”. Just three hours after a major support call from Paris, plus eight and a half years after an MIT graduate in Boston decided to generate a unique ID for any frame in any discreet system using a 28 bit number, Bill Roberts (Director of Product Management – Systems) realized that Discreet had a serious problem. Ever
ReadBreaking News: Critical Message from Discreet
Discreet has identified an issue that affects ALL users of inferno,flame, flint, fire, smoke, backdraft, and frost that MUST be addressed BEFORE OCT 2ND or your system WILL NOT FUNCTION!
Updated Again: Oct 1st
Max Me Out
IBC: This month Maximum Throughput showed the new GUI for their MAX T Sledgehammer. Networked storage and content management is starting to breakthrough as the benefits and data wrangling options can make such a huge difference to a medium to large scale problem.
ReadMotion update
Motion is a great new product but there appears a lot of confusion in various internet forums over how Motion works, a lot of people seem to believe that the realtime graphics preview is lower quality than what you get when you export frames and that Motion uses software rendering for final output. Our motion expert Roger Bolton spoke to Dion Scoppettuolo, Senior Product Marketing Manager Professional Applications at Apple to clear up some of these common
ReadIBC2004 Short Takes: Discreet, Eyeon and More
I was looking forward to being far away from all the election turmoil in the states but I was hit straightaway with a reminder on the walk to my hotel. It seems here, though, there is maybe a bit more concentration on the real issues in the campaign and a bit less on the bluster. Enough said. Time to worry about such things as why espresso is so much better in Europe. And at IBC there were many interesting things to see….here’s a brief recap (in alphabet
ReadReview: Furnace 2.0
The Foundry has been a long time plug-in favorite, and recently broke with other vendors and started offering free burn support (see fxguide story here). With the release of Furnace 2.0 they are offering new tools that offer that “sizzle” we all seek to solve creative problems and make our clients take notice. Mike Seymour has a review posted from IBC.
ReadCreative Arts Emmy Award winners
The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (ATAS) awarded the 2003-2004 Creative Arts Primetime Emmys for programs and individual achievements at the 56th Annual Emmy Awards presentation at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on Sunday, September 12, 2004. Here are the winners in the visual effects categories.
ReadUser Review: Apple Motion 1.0
Apple Computer’s new Motion software was a big hit at NAB earlier this year, winning the 2004 Editor’s Choice award in the Content Creation category. The release is now shipping and making waves here at IBC in Amsterdam. Guest reviewer Roger Bolton, a freelance flame/shake artist based in Sydney, takes a look at what he found to be an impressive software package.
ReadArt of Tracking Part 2: Tips & Apps Overview
In part 2 of the Art of Tracking series, we take a look at the various software applications for 2D and 3D tracking. The software developers of these apps give us some technical insight as well as tips and suggestions how to get great tracks.
Readfxguide.com version 3.0
With our 5th anniversary, our 5 millionth page view, and IBC in Amsterdam, we thought there was no time like the present to debut our new look. The best thing is that the cost of the upgrade is free. We hope you like the new cleaner and more easily-navigatable site. The new version has been tested in most browsers (Explorer, Mozilla, Netscape, Safari, Opera, and Firefox) on the Mac, PC, and Linux and we feel pretty good about its compatibility. Please Read
Art of Tracking Part 1: History of Tracking
In part one of a two part series about tracking, Mike Seymour covers the history of 2D and 3D tracking in visual effects. Today’s artists might take it for granted, but what companies and individuals helped bring image processing innovation to the field and change the industry forever?
ReadThe Foundry Stops Charging for burn Licenses
In significant move, The Foundry have announced that all new purchases of Furnace, Tinder, and Anivil for discreet will include free site licenses for Burn. Burn will most likely be opened up to even more facilities, with burn support in Fire shown as a technology demo at NAB. This may help many facilities in their decision about the software, since adding sparks to burn nodes can quickly add up…making the purchase of burn a fairly expensive proposition.
ReadDiscreet Version 6/9 : Up-Close Part 1
Discreet announced new versions of their effects last week — inferno 6, flame 9, and flint 9. The technology demo at NAB this year gave a preview of some of the possible features and now the final ones have been locked in. The number one feature request for years — Clip History — is now a reality and forms the basis of a strong new offering from Discreet. Click below to get the full story….
ReadDiscreet Announces New Versions
Discreet introducted new versions of its inferno, flame, and effects software today. The software is planned for a fall release and brings to reality many of the new features seen at the technology demo at NAB 2004. Fxguide will be taking an up-close look at the software in the coming days, but for now, here’s the Discreet press release…..
Read56th Annual Emmy Award Nominees
The nominations for the 56th Annual Emmy Awards were announced today, here are the Visual Effects Nominees:
Readirobot: What happens in the last 2 months
With deadlines for the films worldwide release looming, I, Robot visual effects supervisor John Nelson spoke to Fxguide on a busy Sunday afternoon in Los Angeles. We also caught up with lead visual effects house’s Digital Domains Andy Jones & Erik Nash, and WETA’s Joe Letteri, on the push to finish one of the summers biggest effects films.
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