Mailing List AE-List@media-motion.tv ? Message #47559
From: Teddy Gage <teddygage@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [AE] The History of Adobe After Effects
Date: Fri, 1 Feb 2013 11:05:24 -0500
To: After Effects Mail List <AE-List@media-motion.tv>, mylenium@mylenium.de <mylenium@mylenium.de>
With all that "back in my day computers used punch cards and it took three hours to render a line" I thought for sure you were at least 70. Don't criticize people for reminiscing then go all grumpy old men yourself, is all I'm saying...
:D

On Friday, February 1, 2013, mylenium@mylenium.de wrote:
Whoa... Retirement at 38... Now that would be something... (Not that I would object with my health problems and all...)
 
Mylenium
 
[Pour Mylène, ange sur terre]
-----------------------------------------
www.mylenium.de

Teddy Gage <teddygage@gmail.com> hat am 1. Februar 2013 um 16:47 geschrieben:
"When I started out as an 3d artist 19 years ago"... 
 
You wouldn't happen to be typing this from the retirement home computer, would you? 
 
You're certainly grumpy enough to be a grandfather...

Sent from my iPad

On Feb 1, 2013, at 10:38 AM, " mylenium@mylenium.de" < mylenium@mylenium.de> wrote:
I tend to see it from a different angle, coming from a 3D graphics background. I don't think anyone was actually excluded in the past. People just take affordable equipment or things like discounted education versions for granted these days, luxuries we never had. There wasn't even something like Blender around when I started out as an 3D artist 19 years ago. And still, if you only wanted hard enough you could somehow manage to buy your tools no matter how expensive they may have been (not talking about a 50000 bucks SGI workstation and another 70000 bucks Power Animator license, obviously; more like a 3000 bucks Lightwave license). And instead of the annual upgrade death spiral we have now, they got an update every 2 years and you actually had time to learn them and hone your skills and save the money. It works in many ways, if you get my meaning.... And seeing how many people struggle with even the simplest tutorials, I'm not sure if it's just a "literacy" people can pick up or it produces more talent in any way... To me, it still comes down to this: People, who can't draw a straight line with a pencil probably shouldn't call themselves "motiongraphics artist". Or in other words: I consider a classical training/ education just as important or even more important than just hacking around on the computer or doing odd things with your digital camera....
 
Mylenium
 
[Pour Mylène, ange sur terre]
-----------------------------------------
www.mylenium.de

James Culbertson < albion@speakeasy.net> hat am 1. Februar 2013 um 08:37 geschrieben:
You are describing film/video Production in general. And film/video production is now just another literacy, like writing, that people grow up with. So, yes, there are a lot of folks who just start doing it, and we are awash in competition. There is a tremendous amount of incompetence. But at the same time if you have the potential for talent you are not excluded by inaccessibility to tools. I'll take the trade off. I find today to be just as exciting a time as the 90's were.
 
James
 

On Jan 31, 2013, at 11:03 PM, mylenium@mylenium.de wrote:

You're talking like people at the retirement home getting all sentimental... ;-) Things will never be the same. AE has arrived at being "just another software" that is being used by more people with no talent or skills than by ones who actually intimately know it. It's just the way it is, sadly...
 
Mylenium
 
[Pour Mylène, ange sur terre]  
-----------------------------------------  
www.mylenium.de

Jim Lang < james.c.lang@gmail.com> hat am 1. Februar 2013 um 06:29 geschrieben:  
> Darn- Totally missed it.  
> I've been thinking about the AE history lately. I was at a pottery  
> workshop, and  
> the teacher kept telling us that if anyone asked "how'd you do that!"


--
Animator & Editor
www.teddygage.com
Brooklyn

 
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