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Author Topic: Amiga Render Farm  (Read 11340 times)

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Offline pault1

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Re: Amiga Render Farm
« on: June 11, 2007, 10:05:52 PM »
Many years back I knew an insider in the Spielberg/Paramount vicinity and actually got to see the dark, warm room with a batch of Amigas purring away rendering frames for use for a show.  I visited him several times and can't pin down which visit it was, but my guess is that it was for SeaQuest (a.k.a. "Star Trek Underwater" - if you ever watched it much you'd understand).  Oh, and a trivia note - Darwin was animatronic!

As long as you understand that Lightwave is now on version 9.2, (versus what, 4.3 for Amiga), has been multi-core aware for a couple of years, and as they said above could probably exceed in speed (and certainly in quality due to new features) on a single multi-core Intel what that roomful of '040's could do....then it's perfectly valid to try to recreate such an environment.  

I'm not sure that it's really worthwhile for a young person just learning 3D to have to suffer through the waits involved with using old hardware, though.  Any job in which they can be meaningfully productive AT RENDERING is going to be using pretty up to date hardware and software.  If all one is doing is nonlinear editing and an occasional logo, sure, one could still do it productively on a Toaster / Flyer.  Move the task to hi-def, however, and it's just going to be too painful to do it old school. :-?
 

Offline pault1

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Re: Amiga Render Farm
« Reply #1 on: June 11, 2007, 10:22:17 PM »
Oh, and I don't really know what t-net is, but it's apparently related to Amigas and networking (might save you some looking for Ethernet cards).  See info at
www.faqs.org/faqs/amiga/networking-faq/part2/  I don't guarantee that the links listed are still active.  The Interworks site, referenced in the FAQ, seems to be in a state of suspended update. http://www.iworks.com/


If you don't need the speed of Ethernet, and for renders you may not, there ARE other ways of networking Amigas, such as PARNet, SERNet, and so on.  I think there was even a SCSI net at some point but don't remember if they got if working.  T-net may be one of these.  Using Envoy, I think it was, we had a user group meeting with a line of Amigas connected by Ethernet, serial, parallel, and maybe a phone cord or two, it was pretty amazingly flexible.  :-o