Big Buck Bunny: Open Source Animation

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Big Buck Bunny is a very well done short animation video created completely with the open source 3D design and rendering program called Blender. The Blender Foundation, the non-profit organization created to support the software, helped to produce the movie short with a professional production company as an effort to improve the software by pushing it beyond what the hobbyist community could do. In the end they created a great promotion for the software as well as helped to spur various improvements in it's development including the rendering of fur and grass. The video is free to download, but you can also purchase it on DVD or Blue-ray disk. In addition, because it is open source and released under the Creative Commons license, all of the models and music created for the animation are also freely available to developers and designers who would like to experiment with them or use them in their own projects. The next project that the Foundation is working on is a 3D game based on the characters in the movie called Apricot.

Open source projects like these are a real boon to budding digital artists or students since the tools and the materials or content are available for free. Well, almost free. You'll need the high speed bandwidth to download over 7 GB of data file. The finished movie is much smaller depending on what size you download. Plus, you'll need a computer capable of running the 3D software, which by the way, runs on Mac, Windows and Linux platforms.

Here is demo video of the game:

 

 

PRI's The World: Technology Podcast From BBC/PRI/WGBH

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podcast logoI listen to a number of podcasts and most of them are geared toward technology as is PRI's The World Technology Podcast , but this one stands out. This is how they describe themselves:

The World's weekly Technology Podcast brings you all the latest and greatest news from the fields of global technology and science.  The World is a US-based international news and analysis program co-produced by the BBC World Service, Public Radio International, and WGBH Public Radio in Boston.

I put the emphasis on "global" and "international" because that is where the big difference is with this program. You get a global perspective. For example, many tech pod-casts reported and commented on Bill Gates stepping down from the day-to-day operation sf Microsoft. Many pundits focused on the history of Microsoft, the pros and cons of Gate's leadership and they speculated on the future of the company. However, PRI is the only one that went outside of the U.S. and asked people what they thought of Bill Gates. I was surprised to learn that he is greatly admired and respected in China, despite the fact that many computers there are running counterfeit copies of Windows. 

On the same show I learned about an obscure new language called NOL, which strives to become an Esperanto for the Internet and Cell Phone age. It features a compact grammar and vocabulary that is ideally suited for text messaging, while at the same time bridging the cultural barriers of language.

The show just celebrated it's 200th episode. It is very informative and entertaining. While it has not garnered the same popularity CNet's Buzz Out Loud or This Week In Technology, I encourage you to check it out. I think as Americans, we would benefit from a more global perspective.

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