[rescue] Maya Personal Edition/Mac available
Brian Hechinger
wonko at arkham.ws
Mon Feb 25 22:03:00 CST 2002
On Mon, Feb 25, 2002 at 10:58:47PM -0500, Joshua D Boyd wrote:
> > first of all, what is this BMRT of which you speak? details man!
> http://www.exluna.com/products/bmrt/
>
> Renderman compliant renderer, available for free. It was used on A Bug's
> Life, Stuart Little, The Cell, Hollow Man, and Woman on Top.
ok. that's cool. i will definitely be getting that.
> This is a dual head onyx, right? So, yeah, it would be pretty good at
> animation.
no, it's only single headed. i won't be able to dual/triple head it until i
get the third cardcage.
> It would be a pretty good setup for doing simulated animation,
> which isn't something that Blender is very good at (well, nothing is by
> default, but Blender's plugin system isn't flexible enough for really excelent
> physics plugins).
what is the best thing to do that with then?
> The Challenge would be best for rendering, but with BMRT
> and equivalent packages you can use the challenge, the octane, the onyx, and
> many other machines you might have all at once.
BMRT will do distributed rendering? that would rock.
> If you are trying to do really high caliber animation, you will want to render
> in layers, then composite the results. The onyx would again be best for this,
> but the only free software available isn't going to take advantage of the video
> hardware, and anything else is going to cost a lot. I'm extremely slowly
i need to win the lotto just so i can buy software for this damn thing.
> trying to do my part to fix it. The thing that would help the most would be
> for my school to resurrect their onyx so that I would have a decent machine to
> work on in my downtime between classes, although this would technically mean
> that the school would own any software I wrote.
you are more than welcome to time on mine. i don't know if you need to be able
to sit in front of it or not, but if so, i'm not too terribly far from you.
> Either the onyx or the challenge would be good for laying stuff to tape (the
> sirius board will work in either machine). If you are really serious, it
> could be worth buying a regular deskside Onyx for video processing so that
> you can more whole heartedly dedicate the other to 3D performance. Then, just
> drop the Sirius board in that machine.
hmmmmm. i'll have to actually start using the stuff on a regular basis before
i can even think about doing that. :)
-brian
--
"Oh, shut up Buddha." -Jesus Christ (South Park)
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