A great, well balanced letter and I’m sure most Softimage users would agree.

From: Alastair Hearsum 
Sent: Monday, March 10, 2014 10:20 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Open letter to Autodesk

Folks
Dan Y and other folks, I hope this comes across as firm but reasonable. I will 
post it on other appropriate sites. Any ideas on that front?


An open letter to Autodesk.



Dear Autodesk



My name is Alastair Hearsum. I’m a founding partner, director and head of 3d at 
Glassworks. If you haven’t heard of us, we are a small to midsized company 
which has been creating VFX and animation for TV commercials for markets around 
the world, for the past 20 years. We have branches in London, Amsterdam and 
Barcelona. We create innovative and multi award winning work and we use 
Softimage.



Your announcement that you are retiring Softimage has left us saddened, 
disappointed and not a little angry. The anger for two reasons; that you have 
shot the racehorse of the 3d software world in the head in its prime but also 
that you didn’t consult with us about this assassination or discuss any of your 
plans for the future with us. We have no idea what the future from you holds. 
We are big and longstanding users of other Autodesk products as well as 
Softimage. The puzzling thing is, technologically speaking, there was no 
writing on the wall as there was with Henry and Flame, for example, or these 
days with Flame and Nuke. 



We have been punching above our weight, in London, for the past 20 years 
competing well with the much larger organisations of MPC, Framestore and The 
Mill. One of the reasons we have been able to do that, apart from the deep 
talent of our crew is, I believe, because of the software that we chose. I’m 
nearly 150 years old  now but I still sit at the computer making pictures for 
TV commercials to the same arduous schedule that I always have. So I know what 
I’m talking about. For a period a few years back we had a 50/50 split of Maya 
and Softimage. We chose to go 100% Softimage. Its better for the work that we 
do and the sector we are in. Its no coincidence that all the finalists in the 
recent British Animation Awards (tv commercials) did their work in Softimage. 
Similarly, both silver and gold award winners in the 3d animation category at 
this year’s British Television Advertising Craft awards were Softimage 
companies.



You may well go on to list major work that’s been done in Maya. Sure there has, 
and great work too. But Maya is used as a shell in the major film effect 
companies. It is heavily customised and unrecognisable as the product you ship. 
We have our proprietary software and tailored workflow as well, but Softimage 
remains pretty much untouched. It is lean, efficient, and the ICE environment 
is innovative and empowering. 



So you’ve done it. What’s next? Like I said we have had vague information about 
what the future holds. We hear rumours about bi-frost and that’s about it. From 
what I understand from various sources there are no plans to replicate the 
efficient workflow and full ice functionality that made us so productive. You 
have offered free transitionary licenses of Maya with the threat of having to 
discontinue using Softimage in 2 years time. 




The final thought is not just about what software is best for our future but 
also about what sort of software supply company we want to get into bed with. 
The attributes that come top of my list: listening to customers, acting on 
their recommendations, speedy development, innovation. Now does that sound like 
you?



Alastair Hearsum

Glassworks.




-- 

Alastair Hearsum 
Head of 3d 


33/34 Great Pulteney Street
London
W1F 9NP
+44 (0)20 7434 1182
glassworks.co.uk 
Glassworks Terms and Conditions of Sale can be found at glassworks.co.uk 
(Company registered in England with number 04759979. Registered office 25 
Harley Street, London, W1G 9BR. VAT registration number: 867290000) 
Please consider the environment before you print this email. 
DISCLAIMER: This e-mail and attachments are strictly privileged, private and 
confidential and are intended solely for the stated recipient(s). Any views or 
opinions presented are solely those of the author and do not necessarily 
represent those of the Company. If you are not the intended recipient, be 
advised that you have received this e-mail in error and that any use, 
dissemination, forwarding, printing, or copying of this e-mail is strictly 
prohibited. If this transmission is received in error please kindly return it 
to the sender and delete this message from your system. 

Reply via email to