Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Rise of the Machines


Back in 1995 computers were becoming more common place in the day-to-day world and the college did not want to be left out.
With that in mind the college put out a call for applications for Technology Incentive Grants for the purchase of computers to be used as part of teaching or research.
 I received a $12,000 grant to purchase a state-of-art computer, an AutoCAD program and 36” wide pen plotter plus other accessories.

The purchasing office called me to double check my order.
First they wanted to know why I did not want the new Windows 95 operating system and I told them that AutoCAD was not ready to run on it yet.
They also wanted to know if I really wanted and needed 12 megabytes of RAM when most computers were coming with only 4 megabytes at that time.
I would soon add even more RAM before my next computer upgrade.
My current computer has 4 gigabytes of RAM, a thousand times more than the average computer of 1995.

Around the same time I signed up to take several AutoCAD classes at the local adult education program that helped me learn the program and I really enjoyed it.
I was nice to be back in a classroom on the student side again and even better to go someplace away from the college once a week and be with some “normal” people.
Because I had the computer and program I had an advantage over most of the other students who did not access to the equipment outside of class.
I have looked for another class to take but I have yet to find something that interested me or I wanted to take.

It took a while, but not too long, for me to do all my working drawings and light plots on the computer and put away my drafting tools.
I really enjoyed drafting by hand but enjoy more the time that the computer freed up for me.
Even after using AutoCAD for 20 plus years I am far from an expert and only use just a small portion of the programs capabilities.

The Pen Plotter was nice to have as it printed out full size working drawings, it was fun to watch but slow by today’s standards.
It could take an hour or more to print out a full lighting plot.
Architecture firms at the time would hire special staff to work overnight to stay and print out large and complex drawings that could take hours to print.
A few years later we would replace the Pen Plotter with a wide Desk Jet printer that printed out much faster and also allowed us to print out other items, not just draftings.
Soon we would use the printer to produce reproductions of paintings and other pictures to use on sets.

Each year there is another use for computers in our Theatre productions.
Back in the 1990’s we first used computers to burn CDs for our sound effects and music used in plays and soon people forgot how to use Reel-to-Reel tape decks or more importantly how to splice the tape.
The BBC sound effects library on vinyl records was soon replaced with sounds on CDs and then through internet sites like Find Sounds.Com.
With the birth of Napster in 1999 and then I-Tunes in 2001, finding music for plays became very easy, but questions for paying royalties still linger.
Soon after the turn of the new century I received another technology grant, this time for the sound playback program SFX and a dedicated computer and sound card to run it.
Since that time we use have used a computer to run our sound effects and music for our various productions.

At first it took some time to train students to run the computerized lighting and sound boards but it has gotten much easier in recent years as most student have grown up using computers and smart phones their whole lives.

Computers now can do many things in theatre from controlling the movement of scenery, production communications, box office sales and much more.
Several of our recent productions have used computer generated images projected on the stage.
We have a 3-D printer here at the college and although we have yet to use in it a production but I am sure we soon will.

It is amazing that the $175 tablet that I recently bought is hundreds of times more power than the computers we bought back in 1995 and can do everything they did plus even more.
Who knows what computers and other technology we will have available to us in the next five, ten and twenty years ahead and where they will take us both on and offstage.

Should be interesting.



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