Friday, February 14, 2014

How can I make anime?




Sarah


So I have some good ideas for a few animes! While telling my friends (who are also anime freaks) they said they thought i was describing other animes i had seen because my ideas sounded so good. They were really excited and wanted to know more about the characters i made up. So i thought i could team up with a few people and make something like an anime short series or something, since it would be our first one. The only problem is that i don't know how to animate it. I can draw really well but obviously that's not enough for an "anime". So how/what programs can i use to animate my ideas?


Answer
My advice is to create a manga first (like bridget said watch Bakuman to get some tips), you need to storyboard the scenes for the anime first, and that's just like making a manga. You can copyright your manga story too, so nobody can steal it.

You need a suite of programs. This is what I'm gleaning from searching around

Manga/Anime artist survey:

- Top 2 paint programs: Adobe Photoshop, PaintTool SAI
- 90% use Windows, 10% Mac
- Almost all use a Wacom Intuos or other Wacom graphics tablet to draw
- or draw on paper and use a scanner, but a tablet will make your life easier.

Adobe Flash is a pretty powerful animation program, and a good one to learn, with the advantage that Flash can be linked straight on a website, or make your own online games. Many modern shows like my little pony are made with Flash

Here's a list of software with feature descriptions
http://www.squidoo.com/2danimationsoftware

Toon Boom is a popular animation suite used by The Simpsons, Spongebob, and others:
http://beta.toonboom.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toon_Boom_Opus

FrameToon is made by a Japanese company, and they make OpenCanvas:
http://www.portalgraphics.net/oc/

Toonz is actually used by Studio Ghibli on Spirited Away:
http://www.toonz.com/

Tvpaint is a full fledged animation suite, and has a trial version
http://www.tvpaint.com/v2/content/article/home/

For 3D, you can use Blender (which is free open source), Maya, and 3D Studio Max.

what are some reverse engineering techniques?




Kevin7





Answer
Reverse engineering of machines
As computer-aided design (CAD) has become more popular, reverse engineering has become a viable method to create a 3D virtual model of an existing physical part for use in 3D CAD, CAM, CAE or other software. The reverse-engineering process involves measuring an object and then reconstructing it as a 3D model. The physical object can be measured using 3D scanning technologies like CMMs, laser scanners, structured light digitizers or computed tomography. The measured data alone, usually represented as a point cloud, lacks topological information and is therefore often processed and modeled into a more usable format such as a triangular-faced mesh, a set of NURBS surfaces or a CAD model.
Reverse engineering is also used by businesses to bring existing physical geometry into digital product development environments, to make a digital 3D record of their own products or to assess competitors' products. It is used to analyse, for instance, how a product works, what it does, and what components it consists of, estimate costs, and identify potential patent infringement, etc. Value engineering is a related activity also used by businesses. It involves de-constructing and analysing products, but the objective is to find opportunities for cost cutting.

Reverse engineering of software
The three main groups of software reverse engineering are
1. Analysis through observation of information exchange, most prevalent in protocol reverse engineering, which involves using bus analyzers and packet sniffers, for example, for accessing a computer bus or computer network connection and revealing the traffic data thereon. Bus or network behaviour can then be analyzed to produce a stand-alone implementation that mimics that behaviour. This is especially useful for reverse engineering device drivers. Sometimes, reverse engineering on embedded systems is greatly assisted by tools deliberately introduced by the manufacturer, such as JTAG ports or other debugging means. In Microsoft Windows, low-level debuggers such as SoftICE are popular.
2. Disassembly using a disassembler, meaning the raw machine language of the program is read and understood in its own terms, only with the aid of machine-language mnemonics. This works on any computer program but can take quite some time, especially for someone not used to machine code. The Interactive Disassembler is a particularly popular tool.
3. Decompilation using a decompiler, a process that tries, with varying results, to recreate the source code in some high-level language for a program only available in machine code or bytecode.

Reverse engineering of integrated circuits/smart cards
Reverse engineering is an invasive and destructive form of analyzing a smart card. The attacker grinds away layer by layer of the smart card and takes pictures with an electron microscope. With this technique, it is possible to reveal the complete hardware and software part of the smart card. The major problem for the attacker is to bring everything into the right order to find out how everything works. Engineers try to hide keys and operations by mixing up memory positions, for example, busscrambling. In some cases, it is even possible to attach a probe to measure voltages while the smart card is still operational. Engineers employ sensors to detect and prevent this attack. This attack is not very common because it requires a large investment in effort and special equipment that is generally only available to large chip manufacturers. Furthermore, the payoff from this attack is low since other security techniques are often employed such as shadow accounts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_engineering




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