Linked by David Adams on Tue 4th Dec 2007 19:39 UTC, submitted by michuk
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Member since:
2007-02-17
Well not all of Autodesk's is strictly window. Eventhough the software wasn't originally developed by them Maya runs fine on all three OS's MacOSX, Linux and windows. Because of this that particular software has almost become the defacto 3D package in the industry, it is installed everywhere and therefore used everywhere. name a movie that you saw and chances are the Maya was used on it. Adobe is a rare one, they support tow platforms but the big effects houses in the industry usually have a linux based pipeline, yet adobe which is used heavily in production is still not available for Linux. Rhythm and Hues (Chronicles of Narnia, etc) for example extended gimp to support common cinema color spaces and formats, yet the gimp team decided not use the additions added by the the film industry and instead now have the mess that they do. The work was already half done, why they didn;t use it is beyond me. Adobe can be replaced, its just a matter of producing a better alternative and if its open the better. The issue is that right now we don;t have a better alternative and Adobe is entrenched deep into all sorts of multimedia production pipeline. Apparently the rumor is that Adobe is looking to cjhange their gui and toolkit with the next release, due to Apple's soon to be deprecation of carbon and if Adobe were to pick or write a toolkit that was trully cross-platform then we all win.