Thanks! I tried different things between 1990 and 1993.... One bit of advice for some of the early 1990 stuff in particular is to watch that material on a small screen. The larger the screen, the more it magnifies any camera movement, and I moved the camera around a lot - particularly in 1990.
@@lylehsaxon Interesting. I collect vintage Apple computers and seeing them here, when they were new, is really cool. Your camera work is very good considering you had to navigate through such a large crowd. Is there any particular reason you filmed the 'Sculpt' booth so much?
1993 was just before I got into computers myself (I was a little late in buying one - not getting a computer until 1995), so when I went to the show, I didn*t really know what I was looking at. Unfortunately, I didn't have much time that day, so I just went down to the floor, took some footage, and left. Looking back on it now, I wish I had spent a lot more time at the show....
@@droolerdork My very first computer was a used IBM PS/55 laptop computer with 2MB RAM (expanded to the maximum 6MB), a 40MB (yes, MB, not GB) HDD and I'm not sure what the CPU was.... I loaded IBM PC-DOS 7.0 and W-3.1 into it (a tight fit) and while I could use it as a word processor and got it working with a new printer, it wasn't powerful enough to use for the Internet. I couldn't get my second used machine on-line either, but finally got on-line in 1996 with an IBM... (don't remember the model name) laptop with a 33MHz CPU, a 340MB HDD and 20MB or RAM (basic 4MB with 16MB expansion card [not board]). When I first looked at used equipment (couldn't afford new stuff post bubble-era job) I looked at Macs, but they were quite a bit more expensive than IBM clones, so I went that way. For computing on a tight budget, that was definitely the way to go - not only the main machines, but all their parts were (and still are I suppose) much cheaper than Macs.
As someone who regularly attended events at Makuhari (pre covid), I'm amazed that this scene is surprisingly familiar. Thanks for sharing this! What was Sculpt about? I saw a tree generator so was it for 3d modeling?
Can't help about the software - I was just there to take video! As for the venue - it had only opened a few years before (in 1989) so was still quite new when this was taken.
0:26 高城剛と加藤賢崇だ。この頃から今と変わらないスタイルなんだなぁw
私は1996から1999まで参加しました。
1999の時はDVカメラで1時間近く会場を撮影したはずなのですが
そのテープが見つからなく、悔しい思いをしています。
今を記録し保管する事の大切さを理解しました、
何気ない日常を記録し保管してくれてありがとうございます。
This is awesome! I love your videos
Thanks! I tried different things between 1990 and 1993.... One bit of advice for some of the early 1990 stuff in particular is to watch that material on a small screen. The larger the screen, the more it magnifies any camera movement, and I moved the camera around a lot - particularly in 1990.
@@lylehsaxon Interesting. I collect vintage Apple computers and seeing them here, when they were new, is really cool. Your camera work is very good considering you had to navigate through such a large crowd. Is there any particular reason you filmed the 'Sculpt' booth so much?
1993 was just before I got into computers myself (I was a little late in buying one - not getting a computer until 1995), so when I went to the show, I didn*t really know what I was looking at. Unfortunately, I didn't have much time that day, so I just went down to the floor, took some footage, and left. Looking back on it now, I wish I had spent a lot more time at the show....
@@lylehsaxon What was your first computer? It's great footage regardless :)
@@droolerdork My very first computer was a used IBM PS/55 laptop computer with 2MB RAM (expanded to the maximum 6MB), a 40MB (yes, MB, not GB) HDD and I'm not sure what the CPU was.... I loaded IBM PC-DOS 7.0 and W-3.1 into it (a tight fit) and while I could use it as a word processor and got it working with a new printer, it wasn't powerful enough to use for the Internet. I couldn't get my second used machine on-line either, but finally got on-line in 1996 with an IBM... (don't remember the model name) laptop with a 33MHz CPU, a 340MB HDD and 20MB or RAM (basic 4MB with 16MB expansion card [not board]). When I first looked at used equipment (couldn't afford new stuff post bubble-era job) I looked at Macs, but they were quite a bit more expensive than IBM clones, so I went that way. For computing on a tight budget, that was definitely the way to go - not only the main machines, but all their parts were (and still are I suppose) much cheaper than Macs.
As someone who regularly attended events at Makuhari (pre covid), I'm amazed that this scene is surprisingly familiar. Thanks for sharing this!
What was Sculpt about? I saw a tree generator so was it for 3d modeling?
Can't help about the software - I was just there to take video! As for the venue - it had only opened a few years before (in 1989) so was still quite new when this was taken.
me on the left