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Ton Roosendaal (Dutch: [tɔn ˈroːzə(n)ˌdaːl]; born 20 March 1960 [1]) is a Dutch software developer and film producer.He is the original creator of the open-source 3D creation suite Blender and Traces [2] (an Amiga ray tracer which was the forerunner of Blender).
Blender is a free and open-source 3D computer graphics software tool set that runs on Windows, MacOS, BSD, Haiku, IRIX and Linux. It is used for creating animated films, visual effects, art, 3D-printed models, motion graphics, interactive 3D applications, virtual reality, and, formerly, video games.
The Blender Foundation is a Dutch nonprofit organization responsible for the development of Blender, an open-source 3D content-creation program. [1]The foundation has distributed the animated films Elephants Dream (2006), Big Buck Bunny (2008), Sintel (2010), Tears of Steel (2012), [2] [3] Caminandes: Llama Drama (2013), Caminandes: Gran Dillama (2013), Cosmos Laundromat (2015), Glass Half ...
There are various kinds of free 3D design software available to the public, from the mainly graphically focussed, such as Blender, to game engines and software development toolkits, such as Unreal Engine and Unity, that promote communities that self-educate [56] as well as market 3D models and tutorials for beginners. [57]
State legislators in Washington state have a big budget challenge ahead of them. If they want to know why, they should look in the mirror. When the Evergreen State’s legislative session opens ...
The 3D Gamemaker is a computer application developed by The Game Creators, that allows users to make various genres of 3D games [7] [8] for Microsoft Windows.The tool is marketed as allowing users to create 3D games without programming and art skills.
In recent years, this changed and availability of open-source tools like Blender, game engines and libraries drove open source and independent video gaming. [5] FLOSS game engines, like the Godot game engine, as well as libraries, like SDL , are increasingly common in game development, even proprietary ones. [ 6 ]
The original version of the software was called Pencil, created by Patrick Corrieri and Pascal Naidon in 2005, [4] but was abandoned and discontinued in 2009. The abandonment of the project led to the creation of numerous forks, several of which were eventually merged into that of Matthew Chang, resulting in the project now known as Pencil2D.