DAC1138
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Everything posted by DAC1138
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For the gaming community blender3d has become a big option now. In the blender chat, we get a lot of people coming in using it to make games. Actually, that's a large percentage of blender users. They use it strictly for game graphics. Blender has a wide range of output formats, so no matter what the game engine uses for it's main model format, most likely blender supports it.
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Video Editing Software Is there one that will edit frames
DAC1138 replied to jackpinerepublic's topic in Software
EVen if you can't afford the full Adobe premiere or final cut pro, and Avid Free DV isn't easy enough for you, i'd highly recommend Adobe Premiere Elements. It's a stripped down version of premiere, without all the pro effects and pro stuff. By pro stuff, I mean the stuff the average editor or home user won't need. It is well worth the $100, even $70 is you shop around. It is the best bargain for cheap/affordable video editors around.Jahshaka is getting up there though. I'm still awaiting the 3.0 release, where they've totally revamped the interface and started over from new code. The 2.0 jahshaka had a promising Non-linear editing environment, but it needed work. I hear 3.0 is much improved. Now if only we could all see this 3.0 in action, i could give you another recommendation to consider. But until then, adobe premier for the win! -
I like norton ghost. It can save an exact image of your hard drive. Not just the backup files. That way, if anything gets messed up, rather than installing your OS again, and then extracting your backed up files, you can now just make an image of your hard drive, and then if anything goes wrong just restore that image and everything was the way it was when you backed up. Everything down to your OS. You don't even need an operating system to run it, you can run ghost from a live cd and make a backup and restore straight from there. You can backup images to multiple CD/DVD media or even to an external hard drive.
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Yes. ROtoscoping frame for frame isnt really necessary nowadays. Now you can just do the first and last frame, and then adjust as needed in between. I do this all the time with After Effects when I'm using a layer mask and blanking stuff out. It also works with lightsabers (which is quite cliche now).
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I hosted a few videos on my website. I just put them in .wmv format for Windows Media Player. I chose that format and player for a few reaons. The biggest one being that WMP is installed on windows machines by default, so a vast majority of my target audience is using windows machines and already has it installed. So that rules out the need for 3rd party downloads, which complicates things. Makes the choice a lot easier.It all depends on your target audience. If your target is for the non tech-savvy crowd, go with the choice I did, or even choose youtube. If yours is more for the person that knows what he or she is doing, go with quicktime, as you can get some great video with minimal compression.I'd go with youtube personally. Everyone knows about it, but the video quality sucks. You can embed video directly to your site while youtube hosts it. That's a big advantage; youtube hosts the video. That will save on a lot of bandwidth and storage costs.
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Try Audacity. It's no Adobe Audition (which is what I also use) but it is a great tool which I also use sometimes on my system for smaller audio projects. It's completely free and is under constant development.
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Yes, don't settle for anything less than Vista Ultimate. I talked to a CAD designer recently after his upgrade to vista. Apparently the new version of AutoCAD he's demoing doesnt work with Vista Home Basic. It requires him to be running Vista Ultimate. So now I'm guessing Microsoft has a new scheme to make people upgrade by making the more professional apps only work under Vista Ultimate. Bad business move.A smart business move, though, was their move of Outlook from the student and teacher edition of MS office to the small business edition. Student & Teacher edition was for exactly what the title stated. Only it was cheaper. The catch being you must show your student or teacher ID before purchasing. Most businesses just got around this and bought student and teacher, didn't show any ID, and got away with a $300 discount. Now all the business people are mad because 1) they can't return their products to the store (Best Buy, Circuit City, CompUSA, etc...) because the return policy won't allow returns on software, games, or music. 2) They not only can't return their copy, but have to pay an additional $300 for the small business edition. Love ya Microsoft!
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Linspire used to be a lot like windows. It still is. But I think PCLinuxOS and Xandros look and feel much more like MS Windows than any other linux distro. They mimmick everything from the start menu, to my computer, all the way to the control panel. It's pretty natsy. I don't like it when linux distros end up mocking windows like that. I like windows, I like linux, I just don't think the two mix well together. I think linux should stay linux and windows should stay windows.
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I just do personal things. Movies I make with my friends and my group. That's it. I'm not a fan of this viral video bandwagon. If everyone starts doing it, pretty soon no one will be interested.
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This is one thing I don't understand. Youtube and google video compress your videos and automatically shrink them down to a 640x480 resolution. What I'm lost about is why do people spend $2000 for High Def cameras when their main distribution source is youtube? Just a standard Canon zr500 camera would produce great videos for youtube or google video. Why record HD video that looks amazing when it's going to get compressed to look crappy anyway?Anyway, enough rambling. I usually compress my videos to 640x480 when distributing over the web. But whenever possibly, like if I'm hosting my own video, I like to keep it 720x480, or sometimes I'll even shrink it to be balf that (360x240). The smaller size saves the cost of bandwidth. And if you embed video from youtube into your website, that's even more cost effective.
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I can speak from experience that Borland's (free) compiler is really good. I think it's version 5.5 that's free. they go up to 6.5 last i used. But it is a really nice interface to code in. I started on the DOS turbo C compiler as well, and then moved up to borland's 5.5 on windows.
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My point with the hardware requirements is that people dont want to use their operating system; they want to use their applications on top of their operating system. When you have 800mhz and 512 Mb ram, and then you're trying to run an office suite on top of that, maybe have a few spreadsheets open, vista can be bogged down quite a bit. Sure, I've seen people run Windows XP on a 200Mhz processor and 128 MB ram. I even installed XP myself on a 266 Mhz machine and 128 Mb ram. Did it run? Yes. Did it run ad an acceptable speed? If you like waiting 20 minutes for a web page stored on your hard drive to load, sure. Make sure you keep a few magazines handy. And my conclusion was not 'it looks the same=about same code'. There was an article a long while back that I'll see if I can dig up about Mircosoft trying to speed up the development process by just copying and pasting old code from XP into the new (at the time it was called Longhorn) operating system. My example again would be the device manager. Why would you recode something completely so it looks and operates the same? It's just stupid. Yeah, they might have cleaned up the code and fixed a few bugs here and there, but it's not completely from scratch. I'll say that most of vista's new stuff is new, and probably coded from scratch, but not all of it. I've been booting and rebooting vista computers for the past week, and they are slow. For brand new top-of-the-line machines with vista, you'd think it's abnormal for an operating system (running on 1.5 Gb ram and a dual core processor) to take more than 2 minutes to get to a useable desktop. I spend a lot of time with older machines running XP that boot faster than that running on slower hardware. Since I have first hand experience with both machines and have put both of them to the test, I can say all this with confidence.
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When you install OneCare, all other antivirus applications cease to install or even work at all. When we installed OneCare on a machine, we tried to get spysweeper onboard. No luck. So we tried Norton. No luck. So we tried McAfee. No luck. "What the heck," we thought. We wondered if they could just be incompatible with vista, and not interfearance from the OneCare. So we went to another vista machine and tried installing. It worked like a charm.I don't know what Microsoft's problem is. I'm beginning to not like them as much anymore. Their coders can't code anything properly, and their business practices are as bad as Sony. Haven't they learned from past lawsuites that when you are anti competitive you cannot get away with it? They just aren't learning. But I guess if they can get away with it for even 6 months, they will try.
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I was just wondering what 3D animation software you people use, and why? I've been hopping around from 3dsMax to maya, then to lightwave, I messed around with bryce3d for a while. A few years back I learned about blender3D, and evern since the interface overhaul I've been using it ever since. It covers everything I need it to. So what do you guys use and why? Any specific thing you like about that package? I know with blender, I love how the keyboard is the main user interface. Not the mouse using graphical menus. The interface and its size. It's not bloated and bogged down like most other applications.And best of all, blender is free. I know maya and 3dsmax have a hefty price tag. I know most professionals look at software and think, "free? Then it can't be that good."
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From my experience with the final release of vista....no, it's not any good. The hardware specs are way too high for what it does. Look at linux and OS X. Both run on peanut system specs. Vista? You need a NASA supercomputer to run it. From what I've been reading about it from microsoft's training, it's supposed to boot faster and be more user oriented. By faster, I mean it's supposed to not boot up programs you never use on startup. It's not supposed devote all your memory into one application rather than spreading it out so your system doesnt choke. It's supposed to be able to predict what you want to do based on your most used programs, and open them up faster as it buffers it into idle memory. It's "supposed to." It doesnt do a good job of any of that. It's "supposed to" be based off of totally new code written from scratch. But by digging your nails a little deeper into the desktop, it's not. It looks like a beefed up XP desktop. Microsoft has made a lot of promises for vista and has yet to fulfill them.Let me rant on about the 3D side of things. My friends and I were worried about vista's making use of graphics memory for that aero interface. We run some complex 3D animation software which makes use of the same memory aero would be using. Oh boy, did the **** hit the fan when we tried to model something. Even though there were no windows being accessed, our programs slugged down to a near halt. It was trying to do everything off of the normal system memory rather than graphics memory, which it had been designed to do. Since vista isn't much better at memory management, it had two conflicting apps trying to access the same video memory. What a mess.The boot times? Yeah, those are pretty bad as well. With all this supposid speed increase due to the lack of programs being on the startup list, vista sure does boot very slowly. What's even more surprising, even with the souped up hardware requirements vista needs, every machine boots terribly slow. For needing all that RAM and CPU speed, Vista sure doesnt do a good job of managing it all.All ranting aside, I do like vista's new start menu. :-)
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Linux 3D To Be Announced Soon
DAC1138 replied to sandeep1405241520's topic in Websites and Web Designing
Linux has always been known to run on fairly low system requirements. Raising the hardware requirements as Microsoft did with Vista would be a stupid step to make. If the 3D goes mainstream and more popular, as Ubuntu did, more people would use it. The more people that use it the less popular and less likely developers would be to continue to code for the older hardware. I've seen it happen in my entire lifespan. Just look at the history of windows. I can't say the same for MacOS, since every version runs on pretty minimal system specs. All the way up to OS X, that is. Even OS X isn't that much of a hog. -
Film Vs Digital Which camp are you?
DAC1138 replied to chiiyo's topic in Graphics, Design & Animation
Exactly. Not to mention as a solid state backup solution you can use Blu-Ray DVDs which can hold 50GB. Then there's those holographic data discs being developed that will come into play a few years from not. But yes, hard drives are getting cheap-cheap-CHEEEAP. Flash drives are also becoming barely a cost. And if you're still shooting on miniDV tapes, the tapes themselves are becoming cheaper and cheaper. 6 tapes costs about $8. I'm sure if you shop around you can get 6 tapes for about $3 for the bundle. I still prefer shooting on miniDV for archival purposes. Tapes are so cheap you can just label the tape (title, date, takes, etc...) and capture and store in a nice dry place. In the future, should anything happen to your digital backups you can revert back to your old tapes. -
Need To Merge Partitions
DAC1138 replied to nightfox1405241487's topic in Websites and Web Designing
QTparted would be a better, free suggestion. It looks like partition magic, and it's free. You can find it on live linux distros like Mepis and Knoppix. Just boot the cd, open QTparted, and make sure your drives aren't mounted. Running QTparted will autodetect the drives and allow you to resize, delete, create, or merge partitions. Like I said, it's the free version of partition magic. It has nearly all the same features. -
39 Megapixel Camera: Is It Worth Is?
DAC1138 replied to DAC1138's topic in Graphics, Design & Animation
So in other words, "it's a piece of junk that no one will buy." Is that what we've all determined with this little thread? I know there's probably some use for it. Otherwise that company wouldn't have spend the millions (or billions? trillions? bajillions?) of dollars developing such a camera. -
MySpace This one has been long awaited
DAC1138 replied to nightfox1405241487's topic in General Discussion
I only joined myspace because most of my old friends were on there (from years and years ago) and I had to get them an email. The only way was to create a myspace account to send them a message. I've kept my account since then because it's a great way to make contacts. So far I'm really good friends with a sci-fi novel writer, and some movie editors and producers. The best way to get into the movie business is to know someone who can get you that job you want, and myspace will hopefully get me a step closer to that. I don't see what the hurt is in creating and keeping a myspace account. If you don't like it, just don't use it, but it can only do more good than harm, right? -
39 Megapixel Camera: Is It Worth Is?
DAC1138 replied to DAC1138's topic in Graphics, Design & Animation
As previously said many times, 10 MP is quite enough for any pro photographer. You'd think if you needed better quality and better resolutions you would just stick with film. If you really have to do large billboard size prints, film would be the cheaper way to go. I can't even begin to imagine what the memory cards would costs for one of these. That's a pretty funny thought. A 2 gig memory card holding about only 20 pictures. Forget about a photoshoot. You'd need a backpack full of memory units to be able to go on a wild shooting spree. (Somehow that sounds violent, shooting spree?)Heh, maybe the US government could use these cameras to take some nice, high resolution photos of supposed weapon stockpiles being hidden by certain enemies of the country. With technology like this, there's no reason why we should have pictures of stuff like this. Actually, with this thought in mind, what about satellites? They couldnt use this camera itself, but the technology that went inside of this camera could be translated into something space-worthy to take high resolution pictures of planet surfaces.Does anyone have any information about who makes the lenses for this camera? -
I've been using this program for about a year now. It's really a great piece of software. It saves me a lot of time from manually searching for the folders and files to delete. As with webroot's spysweeper, if there was ever a paid version I'd definitely buy it.
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https://www.engadget.com/ Can anyone explain to me what this would be used for? I work with a lot of professional photographers who only use a 10 megapixel Canon Digital SLR camera. 10 Megapixels is fine. 10 MP can do a lot. Now what on Earth would people do with a 39 megapixel camera? I can see if it shot video as well at the 39 megapixel resolution, but it can't even do that. If it did shoot video I would imagine it would be a cheaper competitor to the Red camera. Can anyone enlighten me on this new piece of cra....um, technology?
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There's news that Youtube is going to pay content providers. http://forums.xisto.com/no_longer_exists/ Any feeback on this? Ideas? Suggestions? Anyone think this is a geared move towards Youtube tv? I'm worried about this move. I would love to get paid for putting my videos on youtube and have people watch and love them. On the other hand, I'm worried that everyone with their webcame and miniDV camera will "videoblog" about how crappy their day was, or ***** about the economy, or do really really bad celebrity impressions and they will expect to get paid. Youtube will be filled with this garbage and it will drive people away from watching youtube, saying it's nothing more than a hub for emos and depressed junkies looking for a quick buck. Anyone else have an optimistic point of view to combat my negativity?
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Slackware has always been very stable and reliable for me. I have tried about every distro variant out there. Slackware and Linspire/freespire were two of the most stable distros. I can't say the same for Ubuntu or Mandriva, or even SuSE. I really like Ubuntu and SuSE (not so much mandriva) but they just haven't been very fast or reliable. They were always buggy, slow, and programs crashed all the time.I found that the more you built your own packages and didn't install from a prebuilt repository, the more stable your system was. For this, I tried Gentoo. Turns out Gentoo was even less stable than Slackware. I had some conflcting packages when installing K3b, and KDE completely crashed and refused to work. Pretty soon, for some very odd reason, my computer refused to even startup fully.