Chief Delphi

Chief Delphi (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/index.php)
-   3D Animation and Competition (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=9)
-   -   Lending Computers (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=47379)

BuddyB309 13-05-2006 20:58

Lending Computers
 
We all know that rendering can be a pain. Sitting there waiting for the computer to get done. We all wish we could have a rendering farm or more computers and this lead me to an idea. What about other animators helping each other out by donating their computer when they aren't going to use it.

One animator A would send the project file to animator B and tell him which frames he needs to render and all the other specs. When animator B is asleep or gone for the day they can set the computer to render those frames and send the video back to animator A. Then Animator A has to help out Animator B in the future.

I think this would be a great way to bring us closer together and to learn from each other even more. My question is how many of you would give up your computer for a night to help someone else out with their project?

You can use this forum to post a request for computers or just PM me and send the project file using my email address for my computer is open for rendering. It has plenty of power to tackle any project file thrown at it.

fimmel 13-05-2006 21:18

Re: Lending Computers
 
thats a good idea. isint there a way to set up a virtual network of computers that people are willing to share and then animators can tell 3ds to use the network. i think i read that u could do that but sending the files would work too.
/forest

BuddyB309 13-05-2006 22:43

Re: Lending Computers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by fimmel
thats a good idea. isint there a way to set up a virtual network of computers that people are willing to share and then animators can tell 3ds to use the network. i think i read that u could do that but sending the files would work too.
/forest


Yes, Its called backburnner and there is a couple of problems with that. One problem is that the computer will have to be hooked up to this network all the time and stay on all the time. My computer that I animate with is not hooked up to the internet and never will be.

The second is that back burner will automatically start 3ds max and render the file even when the user of the computer will not want it to. Giving the files to the animator will allow the animator to render the files when they want to, not when Backbunner wants to.

Third some of us poor country folk still have dial up. (me) and we lunge at our friend's high speed internet connection and download and upload everything we need for the week when we are over at their house. So sadly some of our computers that we animate wont be able to keep up with the network swapping and such.

Fourth the network That we would set up wouldn't be that secure. You have to turn your firewall off in order for backbunner to work. (at least thats how we got it to work.

I think sending the files over the internet for the animator to render is an easier way.

Morgan Gillespie 13-05-2006 23:54

Re: Lending Computers
 
I would be willing, yet I cannot. Like Buddy my house cannot get high speed yet my neighbors can. Yet they just built a whole new bunch of houses about 2 houses down with an average value of 1mil. I think Verizon will get the picture that people live here and don't want dial up anymore.

lukevanoort 13-05-2006 23:56

Re: Lending Computers
 
See if you can load backburner on all the computers that can run it in your school. (Not fast, just run) As long as the hubs/routers/switches don't throw away the packets, depending on the size of your school, you could get a lot of computers, or a few. Lets pretend your animation is 1050 frames (30 second animation, 5 second credits), and you can use 60 total computers, then each computer will only have to render 17.5 frames. Lets say it takes 10 mins to render one frame, that's only 2.92 hours for the whole render, the time would be higher in practice, but still better than one computer, (with those speeds in this hypothetical situation, that'd take over a week of solid processing) and they don't have to be top-of-the-line workstations. (It's essentially the same idea as cluster supercomputing) That should solve render woes, but you need to make sure that your backburner server can handle it. Look at it this way, one nice computer, with Windows 2000/3 server (can be bought at educational discount, or often the school district will already have a volume license) and good render times, instead of using someone's gamer and agonizing for several days.

BuddyB309 14-05-2006 14:18

Re: Lending Computers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lukevanoort
See if you can load backburner on all the computers that can run it in your school. (Not fast, just run) As long as the hubs/routers/switches don't throw away the packets, depending on the size of your school, you could get a lot of computers, or a few. Lets pretend your animation is 1050 frames (30 second animation, 5 second credits), and you can use 60 total computers, then each computer will only have to render 17.5 frames. Lets say it takes 10 mins to render one frame, that's only 2.92 hours for the whole render, the time would be higher in practice, but still better than one computer, (with those speeds in this hypothetical situation, that'd take over a week of solid processing) and they don't have to be top-of-the-line workstations. (It's essentially the same idea as cluster supercomputing) That should solve render woes, but you need to make sure that your backburner server can handle it. Look at it this way, one nice computer, with Windows 2000/3 server (can be bought at educational discount, or often the school district will already have a volume license) and good render times, instead of using someone's gamer and agonizing for several days.

All right that would work but what about over the summer? Most schools frown about using their computers during the summer. And the tech department at my is very strict about what the computers do. In order for back burner to work the computers have to be peer to peer networked and thats not how their networked at my school.

Many people are missing my point here let me say this as clear as I can.

BACK BURNER IS NOT INVOLVED IN THIS RENDERING PROCEEDER!!!

when the given frames are done rendering at Animators B's house. Animator B will send the short video segment to Animators A. Then Animator A will have to piece together all the short video segments in using some other program.
Also some of the animators don't have enough money to get more computers and have a crappy computer. (no offense to anybody) I thought this would be a way for us all to help those in need by lending our computers. thus producing a large "network" of rendering farms. This whole process is to bring the animators together and learn from each other. I know that someone on another forum was complaining about re rendering 1000 frames and he wouldn't be able to use his computer for the next week or so. This is a way for us with good computers to help him out.

So it would be Animators A's job to tell what frames and what video format the render has to be in. so then all Animator B would have to do is open the file, set the frames in video post, set the file format and size, and click render. Then animator B would go to sleep for the night or go to work for the day. Animator B wouldn't be using his computer anyway so it shouldn't be that much of a problem for him.

Capt.ArD 14-05-2006 16:39

Re: Lending Computers
 
I got what you were saying. A good idea for this would be an FTP server that someone could set up. then you just upload the files you want help with and people could DL them and render. they would then upload the rendered files back onto the FTP, where you retrieve them.

this could also be helpful when someone wants help modelling or texturing, they could use the FTP to transfer files or tutorials or what have you. someone just needs to bite the bullet and open up their computer for everyone to access.

Gdeaver 14-05-2006 19:14

Re: Lending Computers
 
I saw this blurb a week ago "Nvidia offers Gelato GPU-accelerated renderer for free". Basically it uses the GPU of your graphics card to assist in rendering. Don't know the details but may be worth looking into. There are a couple million transistors on a graphics card and they can be used for allot more than they now are.

Drew 14-05-2006 20:48

Re: Lending Computers
 
well here what we can do is anyone who wants to wrok o nthe summer animation prject can do it and we will all try and raise money for maybe a dedicated server or just a really big server for a year and we can all ftp to it... sounds good?

BuddyB309 14-05-2006 23:30

Re: Lending Computers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Drew
well here what we can do is anyone who wants to wrok o nthe summer animation prject can do it and we will all try and raise money for maybe a dedicated server or just a really big server for a year and we can all ftp to it... sounds good?


Good Idea but I dont really know about FTP servers and such.

Mazin 15-05-2006 16:51

Re: Lending Computers
 
or get a 1&1 solution for $3 a month with 5 GB or $5 a month with 50GB.

I or some other web wizard could whip up a PHP "task" manager to queue stuff up and manage uploads, etc.

Timothy D. Ginn 15-05-2006 20:37

Re: Lending Computers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mazin
I or some other web wizard could whip up a PHP "task" manager to queue stuff up and manage uploads, etc.

If someone is interested in pursuing this sort of development (or leading the group that does) I'd love to speak with them (e-mail/PM/here).

I can offer (depending on your preference some or all of):
  • Hosting on the same server that's used for some openFIRST stuff (and which hosts FIRSTcast, amongst other things).
  • Sufficient diskspace/bandwidth to get something like this running.
  • Access to some code that I started on ages ago which does some of the similar stuff (FTP management / browsing inside zip files / what not). I'm not sure how helpful this will be; but, I figured I'd throw it out there.
  • Some assistance with how to automatically create/delete FTP accounts for users to upload/download from (it's pretty straightforward). These details may be specific to the above mentioned server offer (though anything with CPanel will probably be similar).
  • A bit of help here and there with code things.
  • If you'd like (through Jamie) some help using openFIRST 2.0 in order to avoid having to write some of the more tedious things like user management / logins / passwords / what not.
  • Some help with fletching out a design/spec for this thing.

The one thing that I definitely don't have is enough time to take on a project like this myself. At this point I've already got enough on my plate.

P.S. Just throwing this out there, too: are people interested in adding an animation contact to the FIRST Contacts Database and an option to checkmark their willingness to do renders for others?

Gdeaver 15-05-2006 23:57

Re: Lending Computers
 
Look at this link. If you all ready have a high end Nvidia graphics card this free program and plug in can greatly decrease your rendering time. It Depending on memory and video card cut the time in half. I'm not into video, but people I Know who are rave about this program
Nvidia Gelato

Mazin 16-05-2006 19:32

Re: Lending Computers
 
I don't have nVidia card, unfortunately.

I will be willing to help with a PHP based system, but I don't know how much time I can dedicate. I might also be able to donate hosting, since I have more than a few free gigs lying around.

Here is an outline of what I believe it should be like should it exist:
(drawn up during school, of course, along with a giant meteoric explosion)

Dubbed "rendershare" for now,
  1. Invite Only
  2. Register using an invite
  3. Upload 3d scene
  4. Specify info: program, version, # frames (split into 50 frame blocks), whether saved as frames or a sequence, encoding/type (divx|dv|cinepak, avi|mov, PNG|JPEG|?), points offered*
  5. Place in queue
  6. Someone downloads it
  7. The file is locked when all blocks are taken (guard against stealing). blocks will be locked once someone has taken the task, and stays locked for, say, 2 days
  8. Render
  9. Upload
  10. Submitter will Accept/Reject
  11. Remove project from queue

Users will have stats too:
  • Points*
  • rating +/-
  • completed blocks (status symbol)
  • userstatus - active, suspended, awaiting confirmation...

*I think points would be a cool currency-type deal, where if you really wanted something done, you could offer points if the queue is especially long. It wouldn't bump your task up the queue, but people might want to earn points too.

You guys tell me if something like this is desirable. I could set it up, MySQL-backended, and hopefully not get myself banned from my host ;)

BuddyB309 16-05-2006 21:00

Re: Lending Computers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mazin
I don't have nVidia card, unfortunately.

I will be willing to help with a PHP based system, but I don't know how much time I can dedicate. I might also be able to donate hosting, since I have more than a few free gigs lying around.

Here is an outline of what I believe it should be like should it exist:
(drawn up during school, of course, along with a giant meteoric explosion)
.................

I love it!!! We could also use the points to buy some models from other animators to use in a project or some sort. I love the way you think. You should spend all of your time at school in a boring class somewhere ;) .

I think this is the best Idea we've had so far. I think we should put this into action. But I think we need to make this point thing more important. To make animators want to help out eachother. Any suggestions?

Also who is going to moderate this thing?


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:15.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi