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・ Digital Switchover (Disclosure of Information) Act 2007
・ Digital switchover dates in the United Kingdom
・ Digital Switchover Help Scheme
・ Digital switchover in the United Kingdom
・ Digital Preservation Coalition
・ Digital Priests
・ Digital Priests – The Remixes
・ Digital print matrix
・ Digital Print Order Format
・ Digital printing
・ Digital privacy
・ Digital private mobile radio
・ Digital Private Network Signalling System
・ Digital probabilistic physics
・ Digital Production Partnership (DPP)
Digital Productions
・ Digital program insertion
・ Digital Project
・ Digital projection
・ Digital Promise
・ Digital promotion
・ Digital protective relay
・ Digital prototyping
・ Digital Public arts
・ Digital Public Library of America
・ Digital public square
・ Digital publication app
・ Digital Punk
・ Digital puppetry
・ DIGITAL Q1


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Digital Productions : ウィキペディア英語版
Digital Productions

Digital Productions was a computer animation company in Los Angeles, California, that produced advertisements and special effects for films in the 1980s.
The company was founded by John Whitney, Jr. and Gary Demos in 1982, following their departure from Triple-I. They received financial support from Control Data Corporation. Whitney and Demos felt that greater computer power was needed to produce effects such as those being made by Triple-I for ''Tron''; Digital Productions became famous for using a Cray X-MP supercomputer to render their animations. The company referred to its animation as "Digital Scene Simulation."
Digital Productions created 27 minutes of animation, in 300 scenes, for the film ''The Last Starfighter''.〔(Ohio State University CG history page )〕 Each frame of the animation contained an average of 250,000 polygons, and had a resolution of 3000 x 5000 36-bit pixels; they claimed that the imagery was 50 times more complex than the graphics in previous feature films. They estimated that using computer animation required only half the time, and one half to one third the cost, that would have been required if then-traditional methods had been used.
Other work done by the company includes effects for ''Labyrinth'', ''2010'', and Mick Jagger's "Hard Woman" music video.
In 1986, Digital Productions was bought out by Omnibus Computer Graphics, who also took over Robert Abel and Associates and purchased Triple-I's Foonly computer.
==Notes==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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