Kaydara Announces FiLMBOX Support For Linux 49
Chicken can run writes: "Kaydara announced Thursday in a press release the port of FilmBox to Red Hat Linux V6.2. FilmBox is a real-time character animation and motion capture system and was the software behind the groovy slow-motion camera fx in The Matrix. What is interesting is that it is the first such system to be available on Red Hat Linux, opening further the door to major 3D production oportunities on the OS."
This is funny (Score:2)
Personally, I think that it's stupid to port this stuff to Linux as long as it sags in the areas multimedia and real-time. This port would be better served for BeOS, where the latency for multimedia operations is much lower (and much more predictible). This isn't a flamebait against Linux, just a statement of the facts. Obviously they're looking for hype first before technological feasability.
Does this mean... (Score:4)
Their website? (Score:1)
Sweet (Score:1)
Where's the warez site for this?
-Superb0wl
I'm in a quandry... (Score:1)
I know! A new poll!
[ ] This isn't freshmeat
[ ] Hollywood loves Linux because it saves them money
[ ] Imagine how many pictures you could take with a beowulf cluster of these thing
[ ] It runs on a handheld! (150 external cameras not included)
--
Re:What the? (Score:1)
hypothetically, i'm making a movie... (Score:3)
Uh, did SLASHDOT read this [slashdot.org] article?
They'll do even more impossible things than that (Score:4)
it's nice to see some major apps for linux (Score:1)
Corel soon to release some decent gfx apps,
lots of games coming,
good support from DB2,Oracle @co..
it seems the 'real' world is looking at Linux as being more than a toy for geeks and a cheep web platform.
if only someone would write a good dtp for Linux (I feel a source forge attack coming on).
the only bad news in the article is that it used that 'RED HAT' phrase again..
This helps linux in Gaming and Film industry (Score:1)
Here's how: (Score:2)
Now that the product is out the door, they will likely test on other distros, doing porting where necessary (different libs or locations, for instance). Anyway, that's what my company is doing.
--
Can you imagine a cluster of these? (Score:2)
Maybe when they say RedHat they mean it'll be bundled in the 2 zillion cd pack :) that they redhat sell for a few $
Re:Here's how: (Score:1)
Re:Here's how: (Score:2)
Yes, the choice of RedHat first is based on market share--what do YOU suggest? That they pick "Joe's Linux" first?
--
Re:Here's how: (Score:1)
-
Re:Here's how: (Score:2)
Linux_publicity = good. (Score:1)
This is useful to us because of advocacy issues. It has been a long time since we have given up the elitist atttude to linux. We need desktop users, commercial applications, and we need the publicity. If the commercial apps are crap, we won't use them anyway, but at least we get publicity off them.
If this release seems to be a bit 'hyped' because they want to be seen as "redhat-linux friendly", then so be it. It can only help linux.
My two cents.
_______________________
Cool (Score:2)
exactly! (Score:1)
What about people who use slackware, or even BSD? Will this program be GPL'd? If not will you bitch and moan and refuse a gift?
I see (Score:1)
However, I'll note that it STILL doesn't solve the problem of testing these different distros. No responsible business person is going to tell you "sure, we'll support it on Distro X" without testing it first.
--
Re:I see (Score:2)
Re:Linux_publicity = good. (Score:2)
I see. So it's Red Hat's operating system now. Not Red Hat's distribution of _our_ operating system. Riiight.
In fairness to RH, since there's no 'about RH' paragraph this isn't a joint press release and RH may not have had a chance to correct the text.
On the other hand, some might say that this kind Linux^H Red Hat publicity != good.
Re:exactly! (Score:1)
Re:I see (Score:2)
Try all you like, it's not going to happen. Example: RedHat switched to glibc before other distros did (at 5.0, I think). So if I released a product for RedHat 5.0, I MEANT RedHat 5.0. It wouldn't work on Slackware 1.2.
You could argue "well, they should say 'glibc' not 'RedHat'"--and that's exactly what my company does. We say "RedHat 6.0 (or greater) OR any 'equivalent' distribution", where "equivalent" means "libraries blah, foo and bar".
But that STILL leaves aside testing. One of the absolute musts to do real testing is to have a baseline to compare against. So port your software to Distro X and test it. At that point you might as well release it. Then you can use that release the baseline for further tests.
--
Re:Their website? (Score:1)
Re:This is funny (Score:1)
*Not a Sermon, Just a Thought
*/
so, another port (Score:2)
Re:This is funny (Score:2)
I suspect if they already have an Irix flavor, accomplishing a "red hat" port would be a simpler undertaking than reworking it for BeOS, assuming that they could find developers experienced in porting apps to BeOS. I don't have a lot of experience with Irix, but wouldn't porting an app from Irix to Linux be fairly trivial. I suspect that the majority of the business cost would be in marketing and packaging, rather than development.
The market may also play into their decision to port to Red Hat, rather than BeOS. SGI platforms have a fairly good adoption rate in entertainment/media production & HP and other vendors are releasing Linux boxen for content creation [hp.com] to compete with SGI. Is it possible that this port is an attempt at breaking into this market?
*THE* software behind the groovy effects (Score:3)
Re:so, another port (Score:1)
Re:Now all i need... (Score:2)
Not that this isn't a cool bit o software. Just don't run out and buy it thinking it does things it doesn't.
Re:This is funny (Score:1)
Re:hypothetically, i'm making a movie... (Score:1)
You can't, at least not by using this software package. It is a mocap-integration package, without much special effects potential on its own. So it does "realtime opengl render".. haha.. opengl render looks more like Quake than The Matrix. The site made no mentin of The Matrix on their brag list. They did make mention of The Weather Channel. We can now do weather-channel like effects under linux;)
Read all about it at the Kaydara website [www.kaydar...argetblank].
It's not the first... (Score:1)
Re:*THE* software behind the groovy effects (Score:1)
Screenshot?
thanks!
Szo
Re:This is funny (Score:2)
Motion Capture (Score:2)
FiLMBOX is a great tool...as with all effects work it's just another piece that makes the whole. You can't think in the box of "one computer/one software package does it all"; use the best of each to make the image on the screen. Use a Mac, use a PC, use a Linux box, use a BeOS box, then render it on an Alpha. As long as it works well, you can spend your time on the creative part of the image...and that's what people will remember in the end, not what you used to make it.
Re:This is funny (Score:1)
>this stuff to Linux as long as it sags in the
>areas multimedia and real-time. This port would
>be better served for BeOS, where the latency for
>multimedia operations is much lower (and much
>more predictible). This isn't a flamebait
>against Linux, just a statement of the facts.
>Obviously they're looking for hype first before
>technological feasability.
From what I read, linux should work fine. After all, they probably ported in from Irix, which means a linux port is a no brainer.
BeOS on the other hand has a few problems. First, they don't currently have OpenGL support. That's why I haven't upgraded to 5.0 yet. Second, they are making a lot of media companies nervous with all their talk about BeIA. That's why so many projects are on hold. If I were running a development project for BeOS commercially, I would probably put it on hold to.
And the business about it being ported to red hat could mean that there are dependencies on the way Red Hat does things. It wouldn't suprise me if the sell the linux version only has part of a hardware bundle at first. That seems to be what most other large media software companies are going to do.
Re:This is funny (Score:1)
Secondly, libGL.so is perfectly present and functional in 5.0... if you don't mind losing your hardware acceleration. The new OpenGL is in beta testing.
Thirdly, people who are getting nervous because of Be's moves towards the IA market haven't been listening closely enough. Be is commited to BeOS as the ultimate content creation (read: multimedia) platform for BeIA.
Re:Linux_publicity = good. (Score:2)
Re:Their website? (Score:1)
Re:Their website? (Score:1)
Re:Maya almost on Linux (Score:1)
Re:It's not the first... (Score:1)
Anyway, I've -used- Filmbox, so I know what it 'really is'. It's AWSOME! I hope I can get a project that needs it so I can go buy a license.
Regardless, I still stand on my previous point. Houdini is the first real 3D software available on Linux.
-Toad
Re:Here's how: (Score:1)
Re:I see (Score:1)
Re:Their website? (Score:1)
Define a movie camera.
They took multiple shots at very short, regular intervals, just like a real "movie" camera, except instead of these shots coming through one lens that pans around the object, they came through many lenses sequentually.
I was led to beleive it was more than one shot per lens (more than one panning cycle), if so, this is my idea of a movie camera. The frame rate of individual cameras is irrelevent as all the cameras make up the virtual panning camera.
If it was just one panning cycle, I am wrong.
Re:Their website? (Score:1)
Re:Their website? (Score:1)
I'm intrigued now.