In 2019 I won an Academy Award and an Emmy, both for my work on the Silhouette paint, rotoscoping, and compositing system.
#Avid elastic reality software software
Avid Technology Digital Film Tools Profound Effects Silhouette Avid Elastic Reality Morphing Software Free Morphing v.2.1.85 Free Morphing creates a sequence of frames which are the transformation of the source image to target image, giving the appearance that the source image 'becomes' the target. I taught myself UNIX and Motif, and ended up writing several graphics programs that became indespensible tools in the fairly new digital post production industry. For some reason they had an SGI Indigo R3K sitting in the corner and my boss said “learn that”. In 1992 I moved to Wisconsin to work for ASDG, which made Amiga graphics software. However Softimage is simply another brand owned by Avid. FYI, the software was I believe branded 'Softimage' in 1998 when they rebranded all effects software with Softimage. While in college at Virginia Tech, I began work at Image Processing Technologies, where I created a custom GUI toolkit that ran on DOS, and several programs built on top of that, mostly as part of a contract project for the CIA which involved scanning and OCR of cold-war era Russian books. Avid owns Elastic Reality today, the trademark and everything, so it is appropriate to have it here. I ended up going all the way to the International Science and Engineering fair in Puerto Rico, where I won first place in the Computer Science division. 4Avid products are now used in the television and video. Avid is headquartered in Burlington, Massachusetts. It was created in 1987 3 and became a publicly traded company in 1993. Middle School High SchoolĪs a softmore in high school in 1986, I wrote a molecuar modelling program for the school science fair. (NASDAQ: AVID) is an American company specializing in video and audio production technology specifically, digital non-linear editing (NLE) systems, management and distribution services. I taught myself the C programming language on the Amiga, and began a long career as a software and design consultant. Later I had an Atari 400, a Sanyo MBC-550 (IBM clone), and an Amiga 1000. I taught myself to program on a TRS-80 Model III in 1981.