It is a very good solid tool and the way they are developing it with certain characteristics in mind for quick design work, top renderer and integrated distributed rendering makes it very very interesting.
It is only a matter of time many studios that are into Maya and have a design department running Cinema4D are going to have to ask themselves some serious questions… it is so much productive and the AFX integration is so nice… mmm… lots to learn. Jordi Bares [email protected] On 1 May 2014, at 19:25, Byron Nash <[email protected]> wrote: > I may end up at C4D since it's the largest userbase in my town. I'm not in as > deep as Maya yet(not even super deep there) but already the interface is so > much easier to use than Maya. > > > On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 2:18 PM, Ed Harriss <[email protected]> wrote: > I addition to what Perry listed, I found a few very small things in C4D that > are nice. (Keep in mind, I have limited experience with C4D) > > > > A preference that changes icons in the interface from pictures to text. J > > An “increment and save” option. > > You can have more than one scene open at a time. You can also copy/paste > between them. > > When moving things, you get a line that shows you where the object is moving > from. > > If you use After Effects, it’s integration looks fantastic. > >

