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Nuke is a node-based digital compositing and visual effects application first developed by Digital Domain and used for television and film post-production.Nuke is available for Windows, macOS (up to Monterey natively), and RHEL/CentOS. [2]
The film was made using new enhancements to the visual effects capabilities of Blender, a free and open source all-in-one 3D computer graphics software package. This is the fourth Open Movie by Blender Foundation, re-rendered and re-graded in 4k resolution.
The Blender Studio platform, launched in March 2014 as Blender Cloud, [161] [162] [163] is a subscription-based cloud computing platform where members can access Blender add-ons, courses and to keep track of the production of Blender Studio's open movies. [164]
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).
Shake is a discontinued image compositing package used in the post-production industry developed by Nothing Real for Windows and later acquired by Apple Inc. Shake was widely used in visual effects and digital compositing for film, video and commercials.
Visual effects (sometimes abbreviated as VFX) is the process by which imagery is created or manipulated outside the context of a live-action shot in filmmaking and video production. The integration of live-action footage and other live-action footage or CGI elements to create realistic imagery is called VFX.
The first two versions of the software, 1.0 (January 1993) [5] and 1.1, were released there by the company. CoSA, whose CEO was William J. O'Farrell. CoSA with After Effects was acquired by Aldus Corporation in July 1993, which in turn was acquired by Adobe in 1994. Adobe acquired PageMaker as well. Adobe's first new release of After Effects ...
Digital Fusion 1.0 1.0 November 1996 First public Windows release (older versions for DOS are not commercially available) Digital Fusion 1.1 1.1 March 1997 Support for direct hardware playback/preview Digital Fusion 2.0 2.0 November 1997 Added timeline, 16 bit integer color processing, SCSI tape I/O Digital Fusion 2.1 2.1 April 1998