Uses This

A collection of nerdy interviews asking people from all walks of life what they use to get the job done.

A picture of Pablo Barquín

Pablo Barquín

Art director, motion graphics artist (Physalia)

Posted in designer, film, hacker, windows

Who are you, and what do you do?

Pablo Barquín, co-founder of Physalia, art director, motion graphics artist and in charge of the Investigation and Development in the studio among other things-and die-hard DIYer!

What hardware do you use?

I have a Dual Xeon 3.2 with 16GB RAM and 1TB hard disk with a 32" Dell with a HD that seriously needs to be replaced and I use a Intuos 3 Wacom tablet. These would be my main tools when animating in the classic approach to the job! But then we like to create any technology that will help us enhance our pieces, so then I would use any sort of self-developed contraptions, like our own motion control system (which is controlled by an Asus EeePc) or light box, and all the things I have lying around in the lab and that could be useful: motors (servos, steppers, cc motors), micro-controllers like Arduinos and Parallax Propeller, sensors, testers, a Dremmel, tools for metal and wood working, LEDs, pliers, hammers and screwdrivers. And more and more boxes of scavenged parts.

And what software?

The usual 3D animation and compositing software: 3dsMax, After Effects, Maya, Photoshop, ZBrush.

We recently used this very cool software for our last piece Resonance, Pepakura, which allows you to print cutouts of 3D models. For browsing I use Firefox, and these the extensions I find indispensable: Greasemonkey, AutoPagerize, Foxmarks.... I also use Eagle for the electronic boards, Phun is good fun (no pun intended) and then Processing for our self-developed electronic contraptions.

What would be your dream setup?

A 3D printer like the one Junior Veloso has built, a CNC machine that can cut metal, a laser cutter, a stereoscopic screen+graphic card, a huge SSD raid that's indestructible, visual programming software that is node-based and doesn't need any code writing. And then, oh! a microwave that cools down in seconds instead of heating up.