Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Dec 22 10:18 pm)
I remember the 8 inch floppy disk drive we used to have at a place I worked at a couple of years ago.
Dreams are just nightmares on prozac...
Digital
WasteLanD
Robertlov, Interesting point here. I actually don't know how many lines of code are in Poser. Aside from the application, there are all the other resources needed as well. Think of the runtime directory, although there is certainly a lot of stuff in there that some us hardly ever use, but even so, it's enormous. As a body of work, the sheer volume that represents what is Poser is pretty much without comparison in any other product available. Think of how many other apps you would ever run across that have a 140 meg installer... not that I'm proud of that number; it is what it is. And all this is being done by a handful of technologists, programmers, artists, and support people. And btw, thanks!
Thanks to Curious Labs....and thanks also to Robertlov for reminding me of my own Geniac, which I hadn't thought of in a long time. For anyone who needs a refresher about what they looked like, here's a picture I found on the 'net: http://online.sfsu.edu/~hl/c.Geniac.html And this site has an archive of all the documentation: http://www.computercollector.com/archive/geniac/ Enjoy... lynn
On the subject of old computers, let's get REALLY old :-) and go back to the old days when computers were room and power hogging monsters and of these monsters ENIAC was HUGE! it was 1,900 cubic feet of black-enameled sheet metal and bakelite, 18,000 vacuum tubes, 6,000 switchs, 70,000 resistors, 5 million soldered joints and miles of wiring. It weighted 30 tons and used 174 kilowats of electricty. On the 50th aniversary of its creation two U Penn students duplicated the machine on a microchip the 1/4 the size of a postage stamp. The current $4 pocket calculator has more computing power than ENIAC had. How's that for computer progress? :-)
Why shouldn't speech be free? Very little of it is worth anything.
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I remember my first computer, a peg-board panel, with peg-board discs, contact points, some 6 volt lights and a couple of D-cells. Then there was HeathKit, Then Radio shack TRS-80, even the Guerilla Bannana dot matrex printer. We also had DOS1.0 programs. We have come a long way. People today seem to have the Instant Pudding, Instant Tea, Rice, Dinner, computer programs that does it all syndrome. How many of us can write one line of code let alone the many lines of code required for Poser? How many lines are there Steve? OK, lets get a new product out. First we need to develope the product, write the lines of code, debug, then test, then debug. We need a manual, can't throw just anything together. Need to proof read, correct, make sure graphics are correct, print, develope artwork, packaging,etc. WOW!!! Have we forgotten what is involved in getting any product out to market. Oh, yes and make a profit. What happened to MetaCreations? Of course we all could go back to the wooden mannequens that sat on the deak. Or how about a PC with 8K ram and 820K hard drive with a 5 1/2 inch floppy. I think Curious Labs needs to be thanked for where they have taken Poser and for whats comming. Keep up the good work Steve and gang.