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Wow, talk about a straw man argument. Electricity to make the movie? You mean the rats turning the wheel have stopped running? What did they not get their cheese allotment and go on strike? Of course computers take electricity, but we aren't building nuclear plants to run our animation computers. These aren't super computers sequencing the human genome of doing quantum calculations. We are basically talking about web servers for the most part. By your logic it would cost us $50 every time we load a web page due to the electrical cost.
originally posted by: enlightenedservant
a reply to: Atsbhct
To be fair, a lot of people still get duped by seemingly obvious hoaxes like the video clips from SecureTeam with UFOs & dimensional portals. That means that cheap and/or badly done cgi isn't necessarily a deal breaker for a lot of people.
sometimes it takes minutes to hours to render a frame. Then theres assembling an animation.
originally posted by: Atsbhct
a reply to: DigginFoTroof
There is DEFINITELY money laundering going on; but ...animated movies as they're made today are not "automated". It takes a team of hundreds sometimes to animate and render these big budget animated movies. Not to mention that every animated movie made today by a large studio is in itself R&D for the next animation project when it comes to tech and production.
It takes a LOT of money to produce these things. No one is working for pennies.
originally posted by: DigginFoTroof
So I just heard that this new animated movie had an estimated budget of $50 million! This is basically the length of 4 cartoon TV shows rolled into one. Given that animation has largely been automated since early 2000, I have a very difficult time believing that it cost any where near that amount of money to produce a movie such as this.
originally posted by: charlyv
a reply to: DigginFoTroof
Wow, talk about a straw man argument. Electricity to make the movie? You mean the rats turning the wheel have stopped running? What did they not get their cheese allotment and go on strike? Of course computers take electricity, but we aren't building nuclear plants to run our animation computers. These aren't super computers sequencing the human genome of doing quantum calculations. We are basically talking about web servers for the most part. By your logic it would cost us $50 every time we load a web page due to the electrical cost.
Rendering servers are not your typical web servers. These are very powerful machines with multiple GPU's that are tasked with rendering the CGI wireframe models. They can run for weeks doing just a small section of the production. So, electricity certainly comes into the cost frame for a heavy digital animation. It is a constant process, review, edit and repeat cycle that certainly uses a lot of energy.
originally posted by: Krakatoa
originally posted by: charlyv
a reply to: DigginFoTroof
Wow, talk about a straw man argument. Electricity to make the movie? You mean the rats turning the wheel have stopped running? What did they not get their cheese allotment and go on strike? Of course computers take electricity, but we aren't building nuclear plants to run our animation computers. These aren't super computers sequencing the human genome of doing quantum calculations. We are basically talking about web servers for the most part. By your logic it would cost us $50 every time we load a web page due to the electrical cost.
Rendering servers are not your typical web servers. These are very powerful machines with multiple GPU's that are tasked with rendering the CGI wireframe models. They can run for weeks doing just a small section of the production. So, electricity certainly comes into the cost frame for a heavy digital animation. It is a constant process, review, edit and repeat cycle that certainly uses a lot of energy.
This person doesn't know that, however I do because I used to build those bad boys (in a former life). We used to have the early prototypes in our test lab running so hot, that we had to shut off the HVAC system even in the winter. We called them "the spaceheaters". They would run so hot while actively debugging, that one time my scope probe slipped off the DSP pin, and my thumb landed on the DSP itself. There was a puff of smoke, and the smell of burned skin, and I was without any thumbprint for about 6 months or so....LOL.
Those bad boys LOVE the electricity....and having a farm of them is not a cheap endeavor either, especially when you need a redundant storage system to store the data as well. These are not your Best Buy computing systems....and the final quality shows that clearly to those with the trained eye.