I stand corrected on the paintbrush and palette knife. But the principle
statement still stands, it's about what you do with em not what you do it
with. I could buy the best most expensive brush in the world and I'd still
be a hopeless painter :)

Peter Witham
Internet and Multimedia Solutions
http://www.evolutiondata.com
icq: 4436851
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Randal
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 12:21 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: <lingo-l> Those OS's again and a question

At 10:42 AM -0500 10/15/03, Peter Witham wrote:
>1. It ain't the OS you use it's the ideas in your head and what you do with
>em. Do we ever hear artists defending to death their particular paintbrush
>or palette knife?

Actually, you do.

As a painter and illustrator I know that finding 
tools that work right for your own technique and 
are not low-quality is one of the most important 
elements to doing good work. The standard rule of 
thumb for oil painters is to buy the most 
expensive oil paints you can afford, then spend 
money on good brushes and other materials. A good 
palette knife is important, but very dependent on 
personal preference (and generally very cheap).

The idea that you can do good work with any tools 
is ridiculous, though obviously a professional 
artist will create a better picture with a 99� 
watercolor set than an amateur will.

The question is, to what degree are you fighting 
the qualities and abilities of your tools and to 
what degree are they aiding you in your work. NO 
good graphic designer would willingly choose to 
lay out a brochure using MS Word rather than 
Quark or InDesign, and similarly most programmers 
who set up web servers and web services greatly 
prefer Unix to Windows.

Of course multimedia programmers need to target 
the platforms that their users are on, but 
currently that is a very large argument for using 
Flash rather than Director -- as one of the best 
aspects of Flash is that you can author on any 
platform and their are very few cross platform 
issues for the final SWF file.

That said, I love the capabilities of Director 
and hope it becomes MUCH easier to make 
cross-platform movies and projects so I don't 
have to move all my development over to Flash.

-- Randal
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