Animated
features
France is homeland or a contributor
to many forms of arts, and the French are especially valuable in this
fast-growing cultural industry: animated features. Each year, the
Festival d'Annecy draws game and animation professionals to
the French Alps. A good place for Macs too, although for a long time,
the main contender has been SGI rather than Microsoft. As more and
more high-end 3D tools make their way to Mac OS X, G4s and iLuxos
are bound to take increasing momentum in that industry. "That's not
the point anyway," American artist John Lasseter explained
to a bunch of young animators at a recent conference in Annecy. "Forget
the machines. The story is everything." His point was that the machines
can do the work now, so forget a bit about them. And when he ultimately
came back to machines, what do you think he quoted as the ultimate
computer for fast, simple video editing?
Mac Press
Of course the Mac community has its
own press too. Still considered a reference -- although it's being
hit hard by Web information -- SVM Mac is the ancestor to
all Mac monthly reviews in France. The French version of MacWorld
recently merged with Univers Mac, a second-generation monthly
Mac zine. The former Golden, named after the most common apple species,
disappeared a long time ago. Lacking visible quality, Icones never
quite managed to impose itself. Although it lives on a small budget
as well, the newcomer Ë Vos Macs gained respect by the Web for directly
usable information. Not a model of modern press, the magazine seems
to offer users the info they really want: a cheap printed version
of what they could find on the Web by searching it several hours
a day.
And as anywhere else in the world,
the Web is catching up with magazines in terms of quality, and has
long overtaken even daily papers in terms of responsiveness. As
time goes by, specialized sites about Mac maintenance or its history
are giving way to other types of sites that are more ambitious,
built on dynamic content, and put together by real teams. Seemingly
the most professional of them, the Swiss and French made MacGeneration
has drawn many users as an excellent information source. It now
holds some of the most active French-speaking Mac forums. A young
site, and surely one of the most ambitious in terms of vulgarization,
ProjectOmega.com has made many enemies among Francophiles
for being written in English, of all languages.
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An old French Love Story
There's more to Apple than just Macs.
Several French names are attached to the French Mac story, Jean-Louis
Gassee's being the most famous. Less famous, yet one that is essential
is Jean-Marie Hullot, who worked on the NeXT operating system and
their development tools, [today known as Mac OS X and Cocoa]. Just
like in the legend, Hullot actually spent much time working in his
garage. And there are many other names. Of course, many French people
work at Apple's offices in Paris's southern suburbs. America still
draws many workers from Europe, especially in the IT market. Money
is a big lever, but it doesn't explain everything. Different ways
of training play a role too, by making young graduates prone to
really bring fresh blood into companies. Then there's this apple-logoed
company that just happens to be in sync with French spirit.
And as anywhere else in the world, the Web is catching
up with magazines in terms of quality, and has long overtaken even
daily papers in terms of responsiveness. As time goes by, specialized
sites about Mac maintenance or its history are giving way to other
types of sites that are more ambitious, built on dynamic content,
and put together by real teams. Seemingly the most professional of
them, the Swiss and French made MacGeneration has drawn many
users as an excellent information source. It now holds some of the
most active French-speaking Mac forums. A young site, and surely one
of the most ambitious in terms of vulgarization, ProjectOmega.com
has made many enemies among Francophiles for being written in English,
of all languages.
An old French Love Story
There's more to Apple than just Macs.
Several French names are attached to the French Mac story, Jean-Louis
Gassee's being the most famous. Less famous, yet one that is essential
is Jean-Marie Hullot, who worked on the NeXT operating system and
their development tools, [today known as Mac OS X and Cocoa]. Just
like in the legend, Hullot actually spent much time working in his
garage. And there are many other names. Of course, many French people
work at Apple's offices in Paris's southern suburbs. America still
draws many workers from Europe, especially in the IT market. Money
is a big lever, but it doesn't explain everything. Different ways
of training play a role too, by making young graduates prone to
really bring fresh blood into companies. Then there's this apple-logoed
company that just happens to be in sync with French spirit.
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