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This is the 1972 representation of the Arts Quad I happened to read about in a magazine from that year before arriving to campus last fall, having until then only seen the space in photographs and on a rainy April Fool’s Day.
I saw this video in Disruptive Technologies class yesterday and it absolutely blew me away. By today’s standards, what you see in this video is pretty trivial from a computer graphics perspective, but when you realize that this video was created in 1972 (at Cornell!), that changes everything. Furthermore, each frame in the video was rendered by a computer that was programmed using PUNCH CARDS (!!) and then all the frames were stitched together using film. The full length film is much longer and depicts Cornell’s main quad from a number of angles.
This video was created by Professor Don Greenberg, who teaches the class. Professor Greenberg has been around for a while and has had a huge hand in many disruptive technologies (most specifically in computer graphics - for more info check out his Wikipedia page). When a student asked if this was the first computer graphics video ever made, Professor Greenberg responded casually, “maybe” (as if he hadn’t bothered to find out). Embedded in this response is Professor Greenberg’s passion for technology and doing innovative things with it, not the recognition that comes along with such achievements.
Posted on February 5, 2012 via chriskurdziel.com with 13 notes
Source: chriskurdziel
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euphues reblogged this from chriskurdziel and added:
1972 representation...Arts Quad I happened...year before...
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