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A short documentary from 1968 shows first computer animation of people [1]
['Mark Frauenfelder']
Date: 2023-07-07
In 1964, Michael Noll, a researcher from Bell Telephone Laboratories, achieved a groundbreaking feat: creating a computer-generated ballet dance featuring stick figures gracefully moving across a virtual stage. While the graphics may appear crude by today's standards, the resulting video remains a mesmerizing testament to the state-of-the-art technology of its time.
This captivating six-minute documentary (see below), produced in 1968, not only showcases Noll's ballet creation but also presents other mind-bending computer-generated visuals from that era. Accompanied by a retrofuturistic score composed on analog synthesizers, the film adds a trippy dimension to the overall experience.
Despite the significant advancements in computer graphics over the past six decades, I find myself irresistibly drawn to these early, rudimentary efforts. Perhaps it's because they embody an unbridled sense of optimism and untapped potential that tends to diminish as technologies and best practices advance.
From computerartist:
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