If you've been to the Salesforce headquarters in San Francisco, or certain resort casinos, you will have seen and been blown away by giant virtual waterfalls that appear on LED walls and wash down, over and around things like entryways.
It's kind of amazing, and way beyond much of what you see on big digital canvases - like big 4K stock videos or graphics.
This stuff is part creative - part science, and the company that does this kind of work better than anyone is a little studio that works half and half out of LA and Vancouver. Fusion CI Studios got its start doing special effects for things like disaster movies and action flicks. They virtually part Red Seas, burst dams and blow things up.
One of Fusion's co-founders, Mark Stasiuk, took the weird career path of being a volcanologist with a PhD in geophysical fluid mechanics, who taught himself visual effects so he could more effectively explain the science. He got good enough at it that Hollywood special effects people started calling.
That science background is the big differentiator between what Fusion can do, versus creative shops that are all about the design.
I grabbed Stasiuk and co-founder Lauren Millar for a call, and we walked through how this all started, their process, and why this level of visuals is so impactful.
Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes * Google Play * RSS
Steve Rickless, Tripleplay
Meric Adriansen, D3
James Fine, Telecine
Eric Henry, Tightrope Media Systems
Rick Mills, Creative Realities (CRI)
Susie Opare-Abetia, Wovenmedia
David Mou, Pilot TV
Rodolfo Saccoman, AdMobilize
Lee Summers, Reflect
David Keribin, CityMeo
High Coghill-Smith, ONELAN
Martin Romanowski, SmartSign
Ke-Quang Nguyen-Phuc, Quividi
Jerome Moeri, Navori
Burr Smith, BroadSign
Luis Villafane, Maler
Francesco Ziliani, SpinetiX
Jose Avalos, Intel
Dan Dawson, Grand Visual
Chris Riegel, Stratacache
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Insight Story: Tech Trends Unpacked
Zero-Shot
Fast Forward by Tomorrow Unlocked: Tech past, tech future
Lex Fridman Podcast
Elliot in the Morning