Re: emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?

2013-04-18 Thread Morten Bartholdy
Thanks for the info, Paul and Peter - much obliged :)

Morten




Den 15. april 2013 kl. 20:54 skrev pete...@skynet.be:

 If you just want to polygonize pointclouds and be done with it – get
 Polygonizer I guess.
 
 But If you’re at all excited by the prospect of messing around with
 topology in ICE – rather go for Topolizer.
 (to me, it felt faster and with better control for Polygonizing as well -
 though that’s just a hunch)
 
 
 
 Paul Griswold mailto:pgrisw...@fusiondigitalproductions.com
 Sent: Monday, April 15, 2013 3:51 PM
 To: Morten Bartholdy mailto:x...@colorshopvfx.dk ;
 softimage@listproc.autodesk.com mailto:softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
 Subject: Re: emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?
 
 Polygonizer is easier/faster to set up  has more features for doing
 meshing.  Topololizer's meshing tools are really there to supplement and
 support all the features of Topolizer.  To mesh anything with Topolizer you
 have to go through a bit of setting up first.
 
 I have both of them  if I need to mesh something quickly I always would
 choose Polygonizer.  If I need to do more than just mesh, then Topolizer
 comes into play.
 
 It's really a matter of what you need to do.  But really they're not
 terribly expensive, so if you can swing it I'd recommend getting both.
 
 -Paul
 
 
 
 On Mon, Apr 15, 2013 at 9:45 AM, Morten Bartholdy  x...@colorshopvfx.dk
 mailto:x...@colorshopvfx.dk  wrote:
  A question to Mootzoiding colleagues:
  
  I am considering getting emPolygonizer4 or emTopolizer for current
  polygonizing needs. I have checked Eric's video demos and read up on
  features but I am still not quite sure which one is the better choice for
  my needs.
  
  It looks like emTopolizer is newer and more optimized especially with
  regards to efficiency when polygonizing, plus it adds some very interesting
  features emPolygonizer does not have. From the feature list, the only thing
  I have found so far where emPolygonizer might have a feature emTopolizer is
  missing, would be liquid filaments.
  
  Could any of you who might have tested both share some insight on pros and
  cons? I am really short of time so I just don't have time to check the
  respective demos, so I am hoping someone knows this :)
  
  Eric is busy - otherwise I would have asked him ;)
  
  Thanks
  
  Morten
  
  
  
  
 


RE: emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?

2013-04-16 Thread Andi Farhall
I have both, and i pretty much always use topolizer. The only time i had to use 
polygonizer 4 was when i had an issue with arnold and cached topolizer setups. 
I ended up feeding them into polygonizer4 instead, just for render. I spoke to 
Eric about the issue, and he's on the case.
A

...
http://www.hackneyeffects.com/https://vimeo.com/user4174293http://www.linkedin.com/pub/andi-farhall/b/496/b21

http://www.flickr.com/photos/lord_hackney/
http://spylon.tumblr.com/


From: pete...@skynet.be
To: softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
Subject: Re: emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?
Date: Mon, 15 Apr 2013 20:54:47 +0200





If you just want to polygonize pointclouds and be done with it – get 
Polygonizer I guess.
 
But If you’re at all excited by the prospect of messing around with 
topology in ICE – rather go for Topolizer.
(to me, it felt faster and with better control for Polygonizing as well - 
though that’s just a hunch)
 
 
 

Paul Griswold 


Sent: Monday, April 15, 2013 3:51 PM
To: Morten Bartholdy ; softimage@listproc.autodesk.com 

Subject: Re: emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?
 


Polygonizer is easier/faster to set up  has more 
features for doing meshing.  Topololizer's meshing tools are really there 
to supplement and support all the features of Topolizer.  To mesh anything 
with Topolizer you have to go through a bit of setting up first.
 
I have both of them  if I need to mesh something 
quickly I always would choose Polygonizer.  If I need to do more than just 
mesh, then Topolizer comes into play.
 
It's really a matter of what you need to do.  But 
really they're not terribly expensive, so if you can swing it I'd recommend 
getting both.
 
-Paul
 



On Mon, Apr 15, 2013 at 9:45 AM, Morten Bartholdy x...@colorshopvfx.dk wrote:


  
  A question to Mootzoiding colleagues: 
   
  I am considering getting emPolygonizer4 or emTopolizer 
  for current polygonizing needs. I have checked Eric's video demos and read up 
  on features but I am still not quite sure which one is the better choice for 
  my needs.
   
  It looks like emTopolizer is newer and more optimized 
  especially with regards to efficiency when polygonizing, plus it adds some 
  very interesting features emPolygonizer does not have. From the feature list, 
  the only thing I have found so far where emPolygonizer might have a feature 
  emTopolizer is missing, would be liquid filaments.
   
  Could any of you who might have tested both share some 
  insight on pros and cons? I am really short of time so I just don't have time 
  to check the respective demos, so I am hoping someone knows this :)
   
  Eric is busy - otherwise I would have asked him ;)
   
  Thanks
   
  Morten
   
   
   
   
  

emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?

2013-04-15 Thread Morten Bartholdy
A question to Mootzoiding colleagues:

I am considering getting emPolygonizer4 or emTopolizer for current
polygonizing needs. I have checked Eric's video demos and read up on
features but I am still not quite sure which one is the better choice for
my needs.

It looks like emTopolizer is newer and more optimized especially with
regards to efficiency when polygonizing, plus it adds some very interesting
features emPolygonizer does not have. From the feature list, the only thing
I have found so far where emPolygonizer might have a feature emTopolizer is
missing, would be liquid filaments.

Could any of you who might have tested both share some insight on pros and
cons? I am really short of time so I just don't have time to check the
respective demos, so I am hoping someone knows this :)

Eric is busy - otherwise I would have asked him ;)

Thanks

Morten





Re: emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?

2013-04-15 Thread peter_b
If you just want to polygonize pointclouds and be done with it – get 
Polygonizer I guess.

But If you’re at all excited by the prospect of messing around with topology in 
ICE – rather go for Topolizer.
(to me, it felt faster and with better control for Polygonizing as well - 
though that’s just a hunch)



Paul Griswold 
Sent: Monday, April 15, 2013 3:51 PM
To: Morten Bartholdy ; softimage@listproc.autodesk.com 
Subject: Re: emTopolizer or emPolygonizer?

Polygonizer is easier/faster to set up  has more features for doing meshing.  
Topololizer's meshing tools are really there to supplement and support all the 
features of Topolizer.  To mesh anything with Topolizer you have to go through 
a bit of setting up first.

I have both of them  if I need to mesh something quickly I always would choose 
Polygonizer.  If I need to do more than just mesh, then Topolizer comes into 
play.

It's really a matter of what you need to do.  But really they're not terribly 
expensive, so if you can swing it I'd recommend getting both.

-Paul




On Mon, Apr 15, 2013 at 9:45 AM, Morten Bartholdy x...@colorshopvfx.dk wrote:

  A question to Mootzoiding colleagues: 



  I am considering getting emPolygonizer4 or emTopolizer for current 
polygonizing needs. I have checked Eric's video demos and read up on features 
but I am still not quite sure which one is the better choice for my needs.



  It looks like emTopolizer is newer and more optimized especially with regards 
to efficiency when polygonizing, plus it adds some very interesting features 
emPolygonizer does not have. From the feature list, the only thing I have found 
so far where emPolygonizer might have a feature emTopolizer is missing, would 
be liquid filaments.



  Could any of you who might have tested both share some insight on pros and 
cons? I am really short of time so I just don't have time to check the 
respective demos, so I am hoping someone knows this :)



  Eric is busy - otherwise I would have asked him ;)



  Thanks



  Morten