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Fantavision amiga
Fantavision amiga











fantavision amiga
  1. Fantavision amiga manual#
  2. Fantavision amiga software#

Fantavision amiga software#

The software had so many features that others did not, and was so well received, that that was the day that we decided to make this a business and not a hobby. 12 1990 at the ILDA Conference in Bradenton, Florida. LSD Font Editor, release 0.5, April 11 1990īill and I first showed LSD (not sure exactly which version) to the laser industry on Monday, Nov. Release 0.85, March 7 1990ĪutoLSD animation scripting program, release 1.1, March 11 1990 RTV raster-to-vector conversion program, first public release, May 6 1988. I could be wrong on this Bill would know better.įVtoLSD, converts Broderbund "Fantavision" movies to LSD format, release 0.9, February 1 1990

Fantavision amiga manual#

The manual indicates "Of course, the blanking information is not used by LSD." This implies that the QuadMod card, allowing 4-channel output from the Amiga, was not yet being sold. Supports blanking coordinate along with X and Y for each point. I believe the first publicly released version of LSD (just LSD, no 256 or 100/200/400 etc.) was available to other people such as Bill Benner starting in 1988. Laser Show Designer, program and documentation copyright 1988, 1989 by Patrick Murphy. This page also has links to early history of Laserium, Laser Displays and a 2001-2002 thread on the Laserist List.Īs for other dates, I pulled out some old documentation and found the info listed below. There is more information about my pre-Pangolin history at.

fantavision amiga fantavision amiga

There was a TRS-80 Model 1 program and a few earlier Amiga programs that came before LSD256, all of which were custom programs done for the laser show company I had with David Lytle and Roger Lippincott. This program was the direct predecessor of the direct predecessor of the direct predecessor of what became Laser Show Designer 256 for the Amiga. Its big accomplishment was morphing between frames. I was the programmer (and basically the only user). Xerox Sigma 9 mainframe computer running custom "Laser Animation System" software written in APL, 1980 I don't know if this counts for the list of controllers, but how about :













Fantavision amiga