Anthony Gratl
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I wonder if anyone would get punched in the face.
David.
Jeez Dave, that's real positive:emote_popcorn:
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I wonder if anyone would get punched in the face.
David.
Jeez Dave, that's real positive:emote_popcorn:
Since you own neither a SCRATCH nor a Resolve, what do you base this on - demos at trade shows? Really? Do you also believe every word the car salesman tells you? Not trying to pick on you specifically, but it's comments like this that have made me stay away from this thread.
I work and earn my salary in the real world - with real shipping products and real customers who have clients breathing down their necks. Realistically, it is another 6 months until the $999 version has a real foothold and the market can decide what to do with it. That's a lifetime in the post-production software world.
The Blackmagic announcement is exciting... I love disruptive technology and disruptive announcements. It makes people think hard and work hard, and usually the industry is better for it.
But not *one* person on this thread has seen anything other than a trade show demo of this product. Not one. And if you believe everything you see in a floor demo at NAB, I've got some lake property in the Mojave to sell you...
Lucas
Lucas Wilson
------------
Reality Police
ASSIMILATE, inc.
LA, CA, USA
Actually the sales representat
ives guys said that will ship in 2 months...
staying positive doesn't mean I can't be funny. I just forgot to put this in
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My take on why you're not in here commenting is that BMD, sooner than 6 months, will be handing you your ASSimilate on a plate unless you guys can figure out a business model to put Scratch out at 1K.
As you probably remember Lucas, in the past I was always defending Scratch, when it was unfairly attacked. I do not have personal ax to grind and personally I find Scratch to be a capable conforming and grading tool. Calling Scratch a capable compositing system is a bit of a stretch. Not having truly dedicated control panel will always be a bit of disadvantage. Any serious colorist will attest to that. And I still do not believe, that Scratch can create a monitor LUT from scratch, as I'd described.
What truly disappoints me, are all these proclamations of happiness for BM announcement and what they have done. Frankly, I would be mad as hell, cause they just stole your business model and in the process undercut your product line by a wide margin.
Why not come out and say what you're planning to do about it. Are you planning to have any kind of an answer? You have legions of fans and they want some reassurance, that their bet and investment wasn't wrong.
Instead all you're doing is harping, that it's all vaporware. Resolve on Mac exists and I saw and played with it at NAB. It's as real as Scratch.
Thanks Lucas for the response. I'm sure it's not easy to maintain calm in the in the eye of such spirited discussion. I admit, that I have contributed quite a bit to the raising of the temperature. So, I apologize. But please understand, it's nothing personal against you or Assimilate. As you have probably seen, I can be pretty outspoken with any other manufacturers as well, including my faves- Baselight and lustre. It's pretty ironic, but at NAB I'd faulted DVision for NOT offering their systems with third party control surfaces, which is an exact opposite, that i told youWell... it does do the LUTs as you describe. I don't have anything to gain by lying about it when there are dozens of SCRATCH users that participate on Reduser and would step in and stomp on me if I was misrepresenting. : )
I really disagree on the control panel thing - but I guess we will agree to disagree there. I base my opinion on dozens of users who have Blackboards and Pablo panels in their shops, and also have a full set of Tangent CP-200s. Artists are very particular to different methods. One of ASSIMIALTE's most passionate supporters and a fairly high-level LA-based colorist grades entirely with just the CP200-BK and a mouse. He has had the entire panel suite and decided he didn't like it.
Some guys have stepped to the full CP200 series and have almost instantly loved it because of the complete customizability with SCRATCH - down to the ballistics characteristics of the trackballs. But others have played with them and *hated* them. Artists and artists and everyone prefers something slightly different.
I don't particularly like the way the Roland JC-120 sounds. Never have. It's always sounded too tinny and "abrupt" for my taste. Yet it is a massive standard, especially in the jazz world. Different strokes for different folks.
You and I have very different perceptions of our business. Look at it this way... ASSIMILATE has been a profitable software company since our first year of operation. And anybody that has been in the software world can tell you that being in the black after year1 with a brand new product is impressive.
When Color first came out - there was an avalanche of doom and gloom and the woe that would bring to our company. The result: our next year was our best ever... because we are *not* just a color correction company, and we continued doing what we do well - selling to our strengths.
Will BM have some kind of impact on us? I'm sure it will. But ASSIMILATE's business is *much* more than just dedicated color correction units.
Knowing about ALL the aspects of our business... and where we are going... I am very confident in our continued success.
And those legions of fans and customers are, by a very large percentage, not on Reduser.
Re-read my posts. I have never said vaporware. I have stated the truth - it is a very early alpha of a product that will not ship for a few months, and will take a few months after that to gain a foothold in the market.
It will be "as real as SCRATCH" (or Baselight, FilmMaster, Pablo, or Speedgrade) when it has been a shipping product to paying customers for a period of several years. Until then, it's a pre-alpha v1 product that has not shipped yet. That will change very soon. But as of today, and this conversation - that is what it is.
Lucas
Thanks Lucas for the response. I'm sure it's not easy to maintain calm in the in the eye of such spirited discussion. I admit, that I have contributed quite a bit to the raising of the temperature. So, I apologize. But please understand, it's nothing personal against you or Assimilate. As you have probably seen, I can be pretty outspoken with any other manufacturers as well, including my faves- Baselight and lustre. It's pretty ironic, but at NAB I'd faulted DVision for NOT offering their systems with third party control surfaces, which is an exact opposite, that i told youHeck, if you'd like to know, I can give you a piece of my mind on any of them, especially Pablo
It's just so happen, that you're pretty much the only representative of a color grading manufacturer present here. I wonder, if Quantel even knows, that reduser exists. And I KNOW DaVinci doesn't, as I had asked them. Martin only shows up here once in a while. Sooooo, you're it! I know, that you can't tell us about Assimilate plans for the future, but could you give as a little glimmer, without being too specific for company plans on moving forward. Thanks again for participating in this forum...
Dude chill out. You are a bit too pompous.
Shashbugu,
I appreciate the support, but... Everybody play nice. Spirited discussion is ok. This starts to cross the line.
And Rihanna has bigger problems than finding colorists. Have you seen the crazy sh*t she consistently wears? I buy People Magazine (yes, I read People... wanna make something of it?) just to see what crazy contraption she's wearing in public this week.
It's all good, man. : )
Lucas
You as a colorist should be really scared, one of the powerful parts of a Davinci are its extensive presets. at $995 you can rest assured other colorists will sell lots and lots of presets to what used to be your customer base. with one click Rihanna's producer will find a suitable grade for her next project and save the dough on your services.
Re-read my posts. I have never said vaporware. I have stated the truth - it is a very early alpha of a product that will not ship for a few months, and will take a few months after that to gain a foothold in the market.
It will be "as real as SCRATCH" (or Baselight, FilmMaster, Pablo, or Speedgrade) when it has been a shipping product to paying customers for a period of several years. Until then, it's a pre-alpha v1 product that has not shipped yet. That will change very soon. But as of today, and this conversation - that is what it is.
Lucas
Lucas...come on,be fare ...We all love Scratch , but you cannot say this....Resolve exist from many years ...they " just "translated to a Mac OS...it's a not a brand new software build it from the ground than need years to work....(same example of smoke on a MAC .... worked very very well right away.....)
guy it's Resolve....
not a brand new software from a brand new company that is dealing with color correction for the first time.....might have some little issue (as every software) but i had a session of 30 min and was working great already (9 layers of secondary including matte blur and was realtime (DPX HD)
Lucas...come on,be fare ...We all love Scratch , but you cannot say this....Resolve exist from many years ...they " just "translated to a Mac OS...it's a not a brand new software build it from the ground than need years to work....(same example of smoke on a MAC .... worked very very well right away.....)
Sure I can ... I just said it! : )
I said in one of my posts somewhere that Resolve is sort of in a weird in-between place. It is established software, but please... A "translation"??
Porting to a new OS without the dedicated hardware that has made Resolve the powerhouse it has always been ... That is *not* a small thing. There will be a period of "adjustment."
And then there are support issues, upgrade issues, etc, etc.
Guys - I've said in other posts and will say again ... Resolve is a killer tool for color! But what they are doing as a company is not a minor thing. It will take a little time for them to get it right, and for the market to react and adjust.
Lucas