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Amazing Animation was a program published by Claris for the Apple Macintosh in 1994.
Amazing Animation was targeted mainly at children and young teenagers, allowing them to produce their own animated short films with relative ease. The program featured pre-made backgrounds and sounds, and "actors" in the form of so-called "stamps". The stamps pictured various objects, such as a boy, a girl or a dolphin, and when dragged, these stamps would play a pre-programmed animation – the boy would walk, the dolphin swim, etc.
Users could also draw their own backgrounds, make their own stamps and record audio.
Included with the application was a special "player" application. This player application was free to copy, the idea being that when one wanted to distribute a movie (presumably by floppy disk, as this was before the days when files were regularly shared via the Internet), one would distribute the player application along with it. The player allowed people to watch the movie without having to buy the complete Amazing Animation package.
Amazing Animation was rated 3 out of 5 stars in a Macworld review.[1]
References
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edit- Bonwit, Stuart (January–February 1995). "Amazing Animation". Washington Apple Pi Journal. p. 58. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- Shannon, L. R. (11 October 1994). "PERIPHERALS; With Click, Animation For Young". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- Halgren, Shannon L.; Fernandes, Tony; Thomas, Deanna (1995). "Amazing animation: movie making for kids design briefing". ACM Press. pp. 519–525. doi:10.1145/223904.223974. Retrieved 19 May 2023.