Welcome to the new Film-Tech Forums!
The forum you are looking at is entirely new software. Because there was no good way to import all of the old archived data from the last 20 years on the old software, everyone will need to register for a new account to participate.
To access the original forums from 1999-2019 which are now a "read only" status, click on the "FORUM ARCHIVE" link above.
Please remember registering with your first and last REAL name is mandatory. This forum is for professionals and fake names are not permitted. To get to the registration page click here.
Once the registration has been approved, you will be able to login via the link in the upper right corner of this page.
Also, please remember while it is highly encouraged to upload an avatar image to your profile, is not a requirement. If you choose to upload an avatar image, please remember that it IS a requirement that the image must be a clear photo of your face.
Thank you!
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Flash Animations Live Forever at the Internet Archive
Like any container, Flash itself is not as much of a loss as all the art and creativity it held. Without a Flash player, flash animations don’t work. It’s not like an image or sound file where a more modern player could still make the content accessible in the modern era. If there’s no Flash Player, there’s nothing like Flash, which is a tragedy.
As lovers of Film we can state:
Like any container, Film itself is not as much of a loss as all the art and creativity it held. Without a Projector, film animations don’t work. It’s not like an image or sound file where a more modern player could still make the content accessible in the modern era. If there’s no Projector, there’s nothing like Film, which is a tragedy.
Unless, of course, some one digitizes it...every time a new player comes along every time the player is "no longer supported." At least with the film container, the designers were always careful to make any new changes, backward compatible.
The Museum of the Moving Image in Queens NY always like to do a Oh and Ah demo when they were displaying their early 35mm projectors. They would set up I believe, an Acme 35mm silent projector, circa 1925-1930 and put on a reel of silent B&W film from the same era and also on that reel, they had spliced a 35mm sound film trailer from a current (at the time) 2000 movie. What made that interesting was that the two film, nearly a century apart would play on the screen and with the splice went thru, joining film recorded so many years apart, the splice went thru with nary a hiccup. That is how sacrosanct backward compatibility was to the designers of that film container....until then came digital and they weren't. It will be interesting to see a century from now, if the cinema art of our civilization will be so lucky.
Comment