You missed the entire point of my post. It is not meant to be condescending but rather factual from a purchaser's point of view.
Think you forgot the other users; Paris, Norm, Jimmy,John, Hans, Ron etc. etc. Go over to YOU TUBE or GOOGLE VIDEO and see more users who never posted. There are users, I know personally, who had CB PAINT on their prior editing system but were never vocal about losing it as they never post here-but lurk. These same individuals privately complained to me why it is not on the Gen 3 system.
No doubt the interface and learning curve looked intimidating which, when opened, the user promptly closes it down.
However, there were three DVD's issued and two manuals plus Chris and I were always willing to help.
I can't begin to tell you how many people contacted me off-line to ask questions about the CB PAINT production and capability.
Do a search also on our BB: Many times questions are asked how to emulate an effect that the "big boys" produce. CB PAINT was the answer, especially the advanced chroma-key portion.
Most of the time, except for wiring , CB PAINT is/was the answer. My Final Cut buddies in my video organization, who look down at us openly and verbally for using a MS editing system, were amazed at what was produced in CB PAINT. This is no longer available.
Rendering was never a major issue when I owned the Solitaire plus as the results were worth it.
Let me see you do Z-spacing with our current softwares....Place a SPARKLE exactly on a wedding ring......draw cartoon animations......we can't do something as easy as that without the use of CB PAINT.
Other current software manufactorer's programs can.
My point is this: I am not shoving this program down anyone's throat. The program is a $950 dollar program plus a $200 dollar Wacom tablet for a total of $1150 dollars lost.
JohnKleban wrote:CB Paint is not a practical program for most; that is the bottom line.
I think I heard the sale totals on CB pain to be about 25, a bomb in sales in all regards. Other than Lou Bruno, Volker and Chris Stone (who I think may have left the Cassie family), I couldn't tell you one other person using that program. So, based on that, what's the point in spending more resources on a program used by 25 people? Frankly, of that amount, I bet some once they bought it, never really played much more with it - it simply is NOT practical for those of us who get paid to make video productions and have to watch the clock per hour; as that program was so slow and intensive to run, almost like doing a "Birdie" affect of 20 seconds that took him 3-4 days to do; nice to watch, but not practical in the real world.