

I'm not sure if this is even the right place to put this in. If it isn't where it needs to be, let me know.
You're welcome . Glad you're here , this is a friendly place to get help with learning TVPaint.NicoToonZ wrote: ↑05 Sep 2019, 04:33 I understand it completely. It's great to hear what TVPaint can do. I'm really thankful and honored that I can talk to legendary animators like you and the team at TVPaint about the software. And I want to say, thank you very much for taking your time to answer my question.
Yes, those guys at Pixar who programmed CAPS were amateurs. I wonder whatever happened to those geeks ?
But why would they do that and what use would it be ? Anything CAPS could do can be done in current applications like TVPaint , Toon Boom Harmony , or OpenToonz. You're talking about a software that was written in the late 1980's and was last used for production in 2003. (even then in the last waning days of Disney Animation as I knew it -- that is , as a studio doing primarily hand drawn animation -- there were plans underway to replace the aging CAPS system with a new program called CHIP . We were testing CHIP at the time they shut us down.)
what did CHIPs look like?D.T. Nethery wrote: ↑22 Jan 2020, 23:09But why would they do that and what use would it be ? Anything CAPS could do can be done in current applications like TVPaint , Toon Boom Harmony , or OpenToonz. You're talking about a software that was written in the late 1980's and was last used for production in 2003. (even then in the last waning days of Disney Animation as I knew it -- that is , as a studio doing primarily hand drawn animation -- there were plans underway to replace the aging CAPS system with a new program called CHIP . We were testing CHIP at the time they shut us down.)
I don't know of any screenshots which show the interface CHIP.Cyndanera wrote: ↑03 Jun 2023, 03:46what did CHIPs look like?D.T. Nethery wrote: ↑22 Jan 2020, 23:09But why would they do that and what use would it be ? Anything CAPS could do can be done in current applications like TVPaint , Toon Boom Harmony , or OpenToonz. You're talking about a software that was written in the late 1980's and was last used for production in 2003. (even then in the last waning days of Disney Animation as I knew it -- that is , as a studio doing primarily hand drawn animation -- there were plans underway to replace the aging CAPS system with a new program called CHIP . We were testing CHIP at the time they shut us down.)
Indeed, yes. Even Disney , who owned CAPS and had the only still functioning CAPS workstations (for maintenance of data from the movies that had used CAPS) chose to use Toonboom Harmony in their last forays into hand drawn animation (The Princess and the Frog , Winnie The Pooh, and a handful of hand drawn shorts such as How to Hook Up Your Home Theater and The Ballad of Nessie).