Sculpt 3D
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Sculpt 3D is a raytrace application released in July 1986 for Amiga computers programmed by Eric Graham. Sculpt 3D was the first ray tracing application released for the Amiga computers. It proved that raytracing could be done on home computers as well as on mainframes. Later, the company Byte by Byte released a port for the Apple Macintosh.
[edit] The Amiga Juggler
The first demo that showed the raytracing capabilities was an animation of a juggler juggling three chrome balls. Even though the juggler was constructed out of spheres, the balls' reflections and movement made it look realistic. The juggler demo was generated on an experimental version of Sculpt 3D. The animation, released in January 1986, generated so much interest that the full 3D application was programmed. See the animation in AVI format[1]
[edit] Sculpt 4D
Sculpt 3D created still images, and a tool compiled an animation from these still images. Sculpt 4D added animation capabilities to Sculpt 3D. It allowed movement of objects by setting keyframes.