They are facts Luc-Eric.  Digging up the data is a bit difficult due to the 
archived nature, but here is a link to show I'm not blowing smoke:

Discreet logic vs. Softimage (search for 'softimage' in the text)
http://tinyurl.com/munclsx

I *think* I have a hard copy at home with the settlement decided at $200M CDN.  
It was settled about the same time Microsoft acquired Softimage.  I once heard 
Microsoft decided to settle just to be rid of the problem and paid them off.

As for the Avid folks, I know at least Mike Stojda left Avid to head up the DS 
project at Softimage and a few devs did too.


Matt



From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Luc-Eric Rousseau
Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2013 7:39 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Why did I pay support?? Why did I buy a suite ? I want my money 
back!



On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 9:51 PM, Matt Lind 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Originally known as 'Softimage Digital Studio' and started in the early 1990s 
for the IRIX platform (1992/1993), it was Softimage's attempt to merge 2D and 
3D into a single seamless end-to-end environment.  The drive to develop the 
product was largely to circumvent the court battle Softimage had with Discreet 
Logic (and later lost at a cost of $200+ million CDN).  The IRIX version 
required an SGI Onyx to run and was largely smoke and mirrors, but it was 
enough to convince Microsoft to buy Softimage in 1994 and later convert 
(rewrite) to work on the Windows NT platform to what is known today as Avid|DS.

After acquisition, some Avid developers jumped ship and joined Softimage to 
help design DS to be an Avid killer.  Softimage|DS debuted in spring 1998 at 
NAB with great interest, largely from customers itching to get away from Avid's 
horrible customer service and old code base.  Seeing the writing on the wall, 
Avid bought Softimage from Microsoft less than 3 months later.

Personally, I've never heard anything about a court battle between Softimage 
and Discreet.  The only interesting bit is between the two company is that 
Discreet was founded by the sales director of Softimage and sold Eddie before 
handing it over to Softimage and going with Flame instead.

I'm also not aware of any Avid developer jumping ship and coming to DS.  What 
weird things to just drop here as facts.

The more common interpretation of history is that Microsoft bought Softimage 
because of 3D and film VFX was cool and they were hoping the Hollywood glamour 
would rub on them.

Reply via email to