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Yeah, When I read that I was just thinking immediately of the great work Digital Dimension's been doing with VRay
On that same note, I've seen The Last Samurai two times and nothing disturbed me about the CG elements, great work Digital Dimension. Also when I rented Final Destination 2 the logs and other CGI translated perfectly to video.
I asked friend of mine at Digital Domain and he told me that I robot is purely RenderMan. Also he pointed me out on their site http://www.irobotnow.com/
Well this is a little off topic now but since you all are interested, here is a link to the directors site where he's nice enough to answer some questions
yeah, I think so too......I mean, their rendering is good but nothing that one can't do w/ vray...........I wonder if renderman is generally faster then vray....
What I know about Vray in a film production - everybody saying - till it will be a standalone or at least Maya plug, studios will not use it with Max ( believe or not but vfx people still like their nice maya boxes better
cpnichols has mentioned that it's much slower. Seems that the only selling point now days is the motion blur.
--Jon
renderman is much slower when it comes to high quality raytracing. Otherwise it is an probably the best scanline rendering engine in the world... problem is, everyone wants effects that are better suited for raytracing.
BTW, digital domain uses a lot of different software, a lot of which is there own software, even some of their own rendering engines. Some of their software is even for sale...
The word robot comes from the Czech playwright Karel Capek, sometime in the 1920’s. The Czech word ‘robota’ means work. Issac Asimov, the profilic science and science fiction author, invented the word robotics in the 1940’s to refer to the study of robot technology.
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