When I started in advertising, I used Photoshop 1.0, and you'll never know the joy of that first update when they added layers. It's was one of the five greatest things that's ever happened in my life.
I was wondering when they added layers. If only I knew how to download stuff back then when I had one of these systems I might've taken a photo shop. Then again the dial-up.
Corridor: "OMG this computer is so old and mysterious!" Me, who works with aircraft electronics still running BASIC: "That's not old, it's got a mouse."
@@shreyasp3287 In a lot of cases the computers installed in an aircraft are basically permanent- you'd have to entirely gut the craft and replace many systems to modernize the core. Way too expensive, and if it aint broke.. I believe that's one of the reason the F-22 Raptor never really took off, the tech they planned it to use was *so* outdated by the time it had been approved for manufacture and the cost/value wasn't there.
@@alextheferret5674 definitely Agree with you sir. Yesterday I posted a Comment and in less than 20 minutes got 127 likes and then RUclips shadow Banned the comment. I hate this behavior. 😠
@Kriscoart Also, I am not hating on you, you deserve to get likes, but RUclips keeps pushing users with checkmarks to the top. Just 27 minutes ago, you had 8 likes. Now you have more than 286 just because of youtube pushing you up to the top. Idk, just kinda weird
Really? Out of all the things that happened in 2019 and 2020, this video is the one that made you appreciate what you have? Not Covid-19 locking us up? Not Australian wildfire? Not American's government failure? Not (R.I.P.) Kobe Bryant's death?
It's almost like the new Photoshop does so much more that it needs to load more. But hey if you're good with 512x512 resolution and 256 colors then sure.......
I technically own all of cs4 but due to family, moving and life incidents and the corruption of the boot sector on the computer it was originally installed on, I no longer have access to the physical media or the serial number (it was registered on my behalf by my late stepdad so I can't claim the adobe account). at least photoshop cs2 serial numbers are publicly accessible via adobe. I miss playing with after effects though. I'm gonna have to check out blackmagic design's compositing software to go along with davinci resolve.
That "custom" filter is actually really powerful once you figure it out- it's essentially a really, really basic version of the code behind a ton of modern filters, and can do everything from smoothing to edge finding (but it only works at a really low resolution) Each box is a pixel around the "target" pixel, -1 means "increase contrast vs this one", 1 means "blend with this pixel", values between or outside that let you do more exotic weighted contrasts and blends.
mathematically, it has to do with convolution, I believe. A convolution is an operation that can be applied to a matrix (image). The filter that can be customized is called the kernel whose values can be adjusted to achieve different effects in the convolved image.
Yes, as a computer vision researcher, I can confirm that. In theory by combination of convolution operations, you can achieve ANY image effect you want (well, except those are not achievable by normal kernels like the median filter). I'm surprised and also kind expecting that this is customizable in Photoshop.
This option essentially lets you edit the convolution matrix that is applied over each image pixel when you select a filter. The one we saw in the video with the four -1s around the 5 in the middle was the kernel for the sharpen filter (or edge detection, Im not sure). Square blur would be a normalised matrix with equal entries everywhere. I am honestly a bit surprised that the guy who works with photoshop every day seemingly did not know this.
---> Graphic Designer and I saw that RIGHT THE BLIP AWAY... and clients give Me RIGHTEOUS S**T for glitches like that. I was straight up wondering if "was that on purpose??? Is it the actual channel name, or is Niko goofin'...?"
The Custom filter actually allows you to write your own convolution matrix, that's pretty cool! So all those filters like Blur, Sharpen etc. were done with specific values in such a matrix, but nowadays you don't even need to know how they work internally.
was just gonna point that out myself, that's really neat that they let you just input your own convolution matrix back then if you wanted to. Really impressive how featureful v1 was.
Glad to see someone else thought that was cool too. I was surprised to see something that 'technical' in photoshop, regardless of version. For those looking to go deeper into the topic, I think this 8 minute video from Computerphile does a good job of that: ruclips.net/video/C_zFhWdM4ic/видео.html It may help you understand what that Custom Filter tool is actually doing.
So when I was only 8 years old my Mom was involved in a small business that digitally retouched photos back in the early 90s. This was the tech I remember them using. It seems really antique now, but I remember they could get amazing results back in the day
Guys... your toy was my powerhouse back in the 90s. We used to think ‘how can it possibly get better than this?’. In fact there was a guy at an Adobe presentation who said ‘to an unborn generation, this will be as easy as using crayons’... you’ve proved that he wasn’t lying.
@@brokeandtired At the time this Mac replaced type-setting, wax machines and paste boards so was cutting edge and showed a glimpse of the unknown future we were moving into. The first iMac made these seem like they were going backwards by comparison and was singlehandedly the sole reason that Apple made it out of bankruptcy (2nd the Steve Jobs returning of course). I was freelancing in the UK at the time and all the agencies were mass purchasing the Bondi Blue iMacs. Fast forward to today’s M1s and it seems unimaginable.
8:00 this is a custom filter matrix that you can fill in, basically telling the computer how to calculate the new pixel (and it's neighbour) base on the matrix. I learnt about it in Computer Graphic class few years ago, never would imagine that it would become useful now that we have traveled back in time to use the original PTS.
Former IT Administrator here just saying this video made my entire year. See you guys mess with this old piece made me super happy. Reminds me of the my old Pentium days with DOS. :)
Absolutely, I'd love to see more Fiverr challenges. Maybe challenges like Fiverr requests in 5 mins, photoshop only using non-dominant hand and no shortcuts, photoshop while wearing upside down goggles, etc.
So, when I was in high school, l was extraordinarily privileged to have a Mac, very similar to that one, in the art department (key word there is “a”) with Photoshop 2.0 on it (also pre-layers). The art department also had an actual digital camera then (a Polaroid something, VERY basic point and shoot). No one knew anything about it or touched it except me. I loved that Mac. I just want to say Thank You and everyone over at LTT for giving me a huge trip of nostalgia. And a shout out to Mrs. H my old Photography teacher!
The custom filter is for setting a custom kernel that can be used to perform convolution with the image. With this you can do edge detection, blurring, improve sharpness, etc! Pretty cool stuff!
I literally shouted, "Holy shit!", when I saw that. I can't imagine normal end users ever having to enter the values for custom kernels nowadays. To anybody without the necessary math training, it definitely would look cryptic when entering the matrix elements in that interface
I remember the first time I saw layers in Photoshop. They freaked me out to the point I was like "well, can't do digital art anymore I guess, this is way beyond me."
@@TheLegoJungle my fifth grade teacher might? I haven’t seen him or spoken with him in years. I might have it on my old Macintosh computer I have stored in a closet. I haven’t turned that thing on in 15 years.
Actually the phrase is 'why fix what's no broken', you can indeed try to 'fix' what isn't broken, that's how we end up with shitty remakes like the american Oldboy, the CGI-ridden The Thing remake, live action Mulan etc.
@@cenciende9401 the original phrase is still absolutely correct. You can't fix what's not broken. The examples you gave were trying (emphasis on trying) to fix mistakes that weren't there in the first place, and therefore failed horribly. "Why fix what's not broken" is also a correct phrase, but the first one is much more suitably applicable here
I think they talked about possibly the oldest cgi in film in one of their videos. Basically every movement had to be mathematically inputted. Yes every movement.
It's pretty insane how much technology has improved over the years. What we're capable of now is so exponentially more than it was just a couple decades ago. And none of it would be possible without all the extremely intelligent people pathing the way for the rest of us.
7:55 The custom effect seems to be showing a convolution matrix editor, where you could create your own blur or sharpening effects, by specifying how much each pixel bleeds into it's neighbours.
Yeah, really reminded me of Kirsch edge-detection (except, of course, everything. The only likeness is really pretty much only the kernel, since that is how blurring is done too) Does make me wonder if that windows could be used to make custom effects advanced enough to run all 8 kirsch kernels though, and getting the max like you want. Or if you need to run 8 different effects and blend them somehow.
Next collab: Linus judges you on your ability to make a real hacking scene that is both realistic and not completely boring. That's way harder than you'd guess.
Actually it's pretty easy if you're doing more than just trying sql injections. Like there's so much inspiration from something like Stuxnet that would be pretty thrilling.
@@creativeanvil2783 Most people don't think of the social engineering without a direct technical attack on tech hardware and software as 'hacking', even though 'meat hacking' is very much critical to most exploits.
@@lobtyu Not sure exactly what you mean, but something like a little poke and prod on a search field and the 'aha' moment when it spits out a result it shouldn't would be cool, if you could get people to understand that the result was key to an exploit. We tech savvy might see a prompt at the root path and think "we're IN!", but most 'normies' would be oblivious. The Social Network did a good job of this just in dialog when talking about Mark's tricks to get the 'facebooks' of various dorms to spit out results of searches showing EVERYONE's pics, by entering a null search (hitting Search/Enter on an empty search field).
For anyone wondering what custom does at 7:56, my guess is that it is a custom convolution matrix. An image is basically a 2D matrix and we basically have standard convolution matrices which we convolve with the image for different effects like Gaussian blur. By setting a custom convolution matrix, you can convolve basically anything. Yep, there's lots and lots of math behind these apps.
@@arothmanmusic Here's the best ELI5-ish I could do quickly: the convolution matrix is a grid of numbers, and what a filter basically does is go over the entire image and calculate new color values for the pixels using the values of the convoltion matrix and the values of the pixels around it. Here it would only use the four immediate neighbors, but usually it's more. So it puts the center cell of this grid (in this case with the value 5) over the first pixel, then maths happen, then it goes on to the next pixel and does the same thing again. Rinse and repeat for the entire image and you have your filter.
you are right. there is a video by Zach Star "The Applications of Matrices | What I wish my teachers told me way earlier" that explains exactly that at the second half of the video if interested
I love the costume filter at 8:04 It is a matrix that is moved over the image pixel by pixel and calculates the new pixel value as a weighted sum of its neighbors with the weights that you defined in the pop up window (the mathematic procedure is called a convolution)
I kinda refuse to believe that none of those CG guys have any clue what it is. That stuff is only one of the fundamental building blocks of image processing and computer vision.
@@nahco3994 I was kind of surprised and a little bit shocked as well. But maybe some if them knew what it was and only Griffin didn't. Maybe a short explanation got lost in the edit...
@@nahco3994 you don't necessarily have to know how something works once it's advanced and modern enough for you to be able to pick it up and use it as intended. For example, most videographers and photographers are not required to know how a camera captures images, only that ISO and shutter speeds are a thing and how they influence the end result. A lot of people use PC's also but most have no idea about the command prompts that used to start up old computers and why they would need to be there to begin with. I don't think it's that surprising. They never had to use them so. Not that I don't think basic knowledge might be useful to better understand how a more advanced software might behave based on the ground knowledge, or that they couldn't perhaps improve their own skills in complex computer graphics by getting some of the basics down first.
Niko: What’s the oldest version of Photoshop you’ve used Griffin: I think the oldest I’ve used is CS2 or CS3 Me: (Dusts off disc with Photoshop 5 on it) Hello, old friend!
While a camera from 1991 would require them scanning the film to digital for editing (the best I could find for the first digital cinema camera was the Panasonic DVX100 in 2002, but digital cinema cameras had been used in the professional sphere since the late 90's), most of what's done in modern action movies is a product of editing. You'd be working off a more limited base (no digital cameras saving all the raw data rather than an unchangeable video file), but the editing tech is really where the differences would present themselves. Some directors still shoot on film now, it's not improbable. Using editing software from 30 years ago would be a different story...
@@drpibisback7680 I think editing was originally going through miles of film, cutting and splicing where needed. That would make it a little bit more difficult. And time consuming.
I'm not sure how far back you can stretch this idea. They talk a lot on vfx react. Artists would have had the same tools, or comparable tools as of today, but it took a looong time to process anything, or animate anything, or rotoscope anything. To be fair, it would be like they would work a month to have the same result as a speed challenge of 15 min on modern machines with modern software.
considering the fact that they still shoot movies on film today because film still has better resolution than even 4k. yea it would be a relatively simple deal to shoot on a 30 year old camera. in fact i'm fairly certain they do since the cameras are so expensive but so robust
It all makes me think of those RUclipsrs who spend hours setting up all their lights, mics and cameras before starting a video where they explain that "Gear doesn't matter!".
@@Albanez39 I think it's always implied that you have to have some basics like lighting and a decent camera and then it's about the person, who then can turn around and get even better stuff
Except two opposite trends. As Corridor has been leaning more into the technical aspects of things and having deep dive instructional, Linus has been severely dumbing down his content. He used to explain wave functions, now he explains how to figure out what's the top of the USB drive.
I worked on a LCII for years. You can run photohop 3.1 in there which introduced layers and is a much better tool than 1.0, but it's biggest tools were Freehand and Quark. You may think that stuff was slow, but you have to compare it to working using photocopies, which was the way we did that when I studied design.
"no pen tool" - yes, the pen aka Freehand Tool was invented by the competing software, Freehand, and was so superior to every other drawing tool that Adobe bought out the company so they could use it.
Naaaww first it was not invented by Freehand. But it was the first one in a more streamlined package. And no they did not buy Aldus to get it. They had their own version long before in illustrator which was released in 87 one year before freehand. Also Adobe never got freehand in the first place. When they merged with aldus the antitrust deemed that the rights of free hands should be returned to its owner abs then it was sold to macromedia.
The first Mac I was working with was PowerMac 7500. Plus Photoshop 3.0-4.0, CorelDraw 3.0, and Wacom ArtPad. That was my college day way back in the late 90s. So, definitely a couple generations newer than what Linus send to Corridor Crews.
Yeah, i grew up learning on a Apple IIc+ machine (one of those old black and green monitors. Only game was "lemonade stand"). We upgraded to a Performa 575 when i was around middle school. Eventually i got tired of the low RAM so i upgraded the 5MB RAM to add 128MB. Didn't get around to PC until we had a whopping 333Mhz system my dad got through work, and never went back to mac since
@@SurgStriker me too....remember drawing a circle you had to tell the turtle to goforward1 left1 x 360...... then it would make sort of a circle with one nearly straight line up the side...
at 8:15 the the filter box with all the positive and negative numbers is called a CONVOLUTION FILTER KERNEL which is a 3x3, 5x5 or 7x7 matrix that lets you accentuate or diminish the value of the pixel that the convolution filter is centred over. A Convolution Kernel multiples, divides, adds and subtracts all the values input into the box by the individual RGB or greyscale pixel values that are in the centre and the surrounding pixel values of the convolution kernel You run a left to right and top to bottom scanning run of all pixels in an image and multiply the individual colour channel values of each pixel with all the surrounding pixels so you get a FILTERED version of that centre pixel value. You can find edges (i.e. Canny or SOBEL), filter out high frequency or super bright pixels (i.e. Hi-Pass filter) or all low frequency or super-dark pixels (i.e. Lo-Pass Filter). You can even get rid of specific pixel luminance, saturation or hues by using a Notch-based convolution kernel. The numbers you type in are merely multiplication, division, addition and subtraction factors that send a pixel value up or down on one or more RGB colour channels or HSL channels depending on what TYPE of pixel values you are filtering. Now you know! V
I remember not having layers and what an insane update it was when they were introduced. I also remember waiting 24 hours for a filter to finish computing. Now it'd be basically instant. Times have changed.
Yeah, it's weird how the 60's, 70's, 80's and 90's were completely different but ever since the "modern" 90's everything has pretty much stayed the same. Obviously technology has evolved but general fashion and pop culture hasn't changed much at all. Like, I was a teenager in the 90's and I hated the 80's synth pop music and the fluro and pastel coloured clothes and perm and mullet hairstyles. The 90's was black and grey and more "sophisticated" and we have been more or less the same ever since
Ikr. I am born in -89. So for me growing up, everything from the 70's was "30 years old" Now I have to face the truth that my childhood is as far away as that seemed to me back then... Fml
I encountered a guy recently that still fired up an old Powermac every so often because there was an old piece of software he used that did not have a good modern equivalent.
@@topogigio7031 wow you really get a hard on from calling people zoomers don't you? This is like the 3rd comment of yours I've read about this on two separate threads. The superiority complex on this one lmao
Back in elementary school I would go through pixel by pixel editing pictures in MS Paint because we didn’t have photoshop on the school computers. Took so damn long and barely looked presentable but I was proud of it
I once got relatively good results using paintbrush in Windows because that's all I had. I found the trick was to make your image much larger than the default size and when viewed fullscreen it doesn't have that unblended look as bad as the smaller images.
Seeing Niko make that dumb little spelling mistake was actually really cathartic for me, it's the kind of thing that I would do (and have done on jobs) and I tend to have a lot of anxiety around making those sort of mistakes. I guess its nice to be reminded that even those you look up to are flawed humans (just like me) and everyone has brain farts sometimes
When I first saw it I immediately noticed it was misspelled... but then I started questioning if it really was right and I was just remembering it wrong haha. Derp moments like that happen a lot, and wouldn't be surprised at all if that lasted for Niko all the way to showing it to Linus
8:01 - That's how an image filter looks like mathematically, it's a matrix used to calculate the value of a pixel (correspondent to the central element of the matrix, in this case 5) using the original pixel value and the values of the pixels around it. The matrix is scanned through the whole image (convolution). The known filter like Gaussian, Blur, etc all work like this, their result is determined by the values of the matrix elements. This window allows you to create your own filter, a super cool thing considering that today to do the same thing you have to manually open the file as a matrix and code your own filter and convolution, for example in Python or C++. It's hard to believe they don't know it because it's the most basic concept of digital image processing.
Wow, I remember using Photoshop 1 back in the day. The airbrush is your friend. To do any sort of layered composite images, you had to line it up as best you could, get it where you want and deselect, then use the airbrush to tease one color towards another along the edges to soften that harsh unblended edge... like.. manually blending literally one pixel at a time by eyesight. This brings back so many memories, lol!
I clicked so many pixels back then. For complex compositions I remember having another canvas open where different parts would live in their own section of white space. When I updated a part I would then lasso it over to the main canvas. Closest thing to layers I could do I guess.
I got a kick out of that. Man, I loved Marathon so much. It's fun and atmospheric and there's an incredible depth to the story. If anyone is curious or feeling nostalgic, check out the Aleph One project, it makes Marathon playable on modern computers, and all the game files were freely released by Bungie, so you can legally play the whole series.
This was so great! Would love to see some sort of follow up video showing what artists from the 90’s were able to actually do with photoshop 1. Maybe interview or show some work from that era.
07:35 *"Custom" is for manually defining a matrix (aka "kernel" or "mask") for 2D convolution.* It's a very basic but extremely powerful algorithm. Most of the factory filters (blur, sharpen, find edges, ...) are most likely using the same algorithm behind the scenes, just by plugging different values into that matrix. It works like this: Each pixel in the image is "convolved" separately with the kernel. You take the neighborhood around it, as big as the kernel (here: 5×5 pixels). Then, you multiply the brightness value of each pixel in that area by the corresponding value in the kernel, and finally all those get added together to get the new value for one pixel in the resulting image. Then, the kernel "slides" to the next pixel, and the procedure is repeated. (Usually the resulting value has to be "normalized" by dividing it by the sum of values in the kernel, to keep the overall brightness the same and fit into the 0.0-1.0 (or 0-255) value range again.) *Examples:* 1 in the center surrounded by 0s does not change the image. All 0s except a 1 just above the center shifts the image up by 1 pixel. All 1s gives you a box blur. If you decrease the values around the center with a roughly circular falloff it looks nicer, e.g. for Gaussian blur (3×3): 1 2 1 2 4 2 1 2 1 The "Sharpen" kernel uses negative values and looks like this: 0 -1 0 -1 5 -1 0 -1 0 And a simple vertical edge detector (the "Prewitt operator") that lights up when brightness changes from left to right: 1 0 -1 1 0 -1 1 0 -1 The blog Programathically has a good explanation with images, which makes the idea probably much easier to understand.
"Custom filter" is showing you an image processing kernel/convolution matrix. Essentially it's telling the program how to modify any given pixel based on the pixels surrounding it. The center cell (the one with 5) is the pixel it is currently processing, the cells surrounding it is it's neighbours. It's current config [[0,-1,0],[-1,5,-1],[0,-1,0]] is an edge detection configuration.
Worth mentioning that the Mac featured in this video was basically the lowest-end Mac on the market and was generally consigned to the educational market. The high end of 1990 included a system, with 40Mhz 68040, that could accommodate six GPUs and [eventually] 128MB of RAM.
I'm going to correct myself, though, because I made a mistake and for some reason am unable to edit my original comment: I meant to say that the high end of 1990 included a Mac that had a 40Mhz 68030 - not 68040. The first Mac with a 68040 came out in 1991. Either way, my argument still stands.
@@beergnomedc I only played the series this last year and it’s so far advanced from DOOM and Duke it was shocking Neither of those have objectives and a thorough story the way Marathon does and out of the three only Duke and Marathon are trying to feel like real spaces instead of just a maze of corridors.
I made the cut! Thanks Niko and crew for our one-of-a-kind janky art piece. Perhaps now I’ll go sell it as an NFT? 😂 With no context, I was really scratching my head trying to figure out what y’all were up to. I thought maybe you were testing some AI software that generated the photo, but nah, just a 30 year old Mac and Photoshop 1.0. Hilarious!
@@nyaaanjake I was super confused recording mine as well! I made my buddy who hadn't seen it yet sit on the couch with me for a more natural reaction haha!
This video is awesome and after having actually used the machine before sending it to you I'm extremely impressed by (some of) the results! Wow! - LS
Super dope of you to send it to them!
Hoi
❤️
Well said.
Nice
When I started in advertising, I used Photoshop 1.0, and you'll never know the joy of that first update when they added layers. It's was one of the five greatest things that's ever happened in my life.
How do you feel about how it's evolved since?
What are the other 4 greatest things?
I was wondering when they added layers. If only I knew how to download stuff back then when I had one of these systems I might've taken a photo shop. Then again the dial-up.
I want to know what the rest are.
What are the other four?
"DOOM was obviously a revolutionary game when it came out"
*Shows DukeNukem*
Yep. This was weird 🤣
my thoughts exactly
Scooped me. Well done.
I've seen Doom running on enough calculators and wristwatches to know what Doom looks like, and
THAT, GENTLEMEN
WAS NOT DOOM
I think he said "duke" didn't he?
Corridor: "OMG this computer is so old and mysterious!"
Me, who works with aircraft electronics still running BASIC: "That's not old, it's got a mouse."
You use basic why can't we use any other language
@@shreyasp3287 In a lot of cases the computers installed in an aircraft are basically permanent- you'd have to entirely gut the craft and replace many systems to modernize the core. Way too expensive, and if it aint broke..
I believe that's one of the reason the F-22 Raptor never really took off, the tech they planned it to use was *so* outdated by the time it had been approved for manufacture and the cost/value wasn't there.
Me, a post millennial child with a tangential interest in retrocomputing: I stand before the presence of gods
Oh, c'mon, a simple hardware mod and you can use an Amiga mouse with an 8-bit Atari.
can you make it do the print 10 thing from the cabin console?
This video makes me appreciate everything we have now so much
I love how since you have a checkmark, you got put up to the top of the comments to get likes 🤔 RUclips what are you doing?
@@alextheferret5674 definitely Agree with you sir. Yesterday I posted a Comment and in less than 20 minutes got 127 likes and then RUclips shadow Banned the comment. I hate this behavior. 😠
@Kriscoart Also, I am not hating on you, you deserve to get likes, but RUclips keeps pushing users with checkmarks to the top. Just 27 minutes ago, you had 8 likes. Now you have more than 286 just because of youtube pushing you up to the top. Idk, just kinda weird
Now my core duo (not even core 2 duo) laptop looks plenty powerful to me.
Really? Out of all the things that happened in 2019 and 2020, this video is the one that made you appreciate what you have? Not Covid-19 locking us up? Not Australian wildfire? Not American's government failure? Not (R.I.P.) Kobe Bryant's death?
Here's the thing: it opens faster than the new Photoshop
Lmao shots fired
Extensions and plugins didn't exist back then
It's almost like the new Photoshop does so much more that it needs to load more. But hey if you're good with 512x512 resolution and 256 colors then sure.......
@@itchix0 25mhz though...
BWA-HAHAHAHAHHA! True!
You aren't just paying $5 for crappy results, you're paying for an unforgettable experience.
That Crappy result would have been FIRE in the 80's.
"Doom was obviously a revolutionary game when it came out"
*plays duke nukem 3d footage*
I guess they must be reeeally god VFX workers. Duke players they are not. maybe a 2021 Duke Nukem full model is in order for the redemtion
...on the apple machine or on a amiga (to be kind)
@@Boegeman It's time to kick polygons and chew fps. And I'm all out of fps.
I absolutely love your profile pic
@@batmanvsuperman_ Mirror's Edge forever
Doom, shows Duke Nukem
to be fair, doom was installed next to duke nukem in the games folder, they just didnt have footage of it running. blame the editors
Makes me so mad lol
There you are
Me: this channel seems cool, Linus must be sharing friends content
Them: Doom is a classic (shows Duke Nukem)
Me: *unsubscribed*
Literally unwatchable.
#1 advantage of old Photoshop vs new: you actually bought the software and weren’t just leasing a download.
I still use CS3. Because I own it.
Ching Liu has entered the chat
@@TravisFabel Same boat but for CS4, on a windows 7 laptop.
I technically own all of cs4 but due to family, moving and life incidents and the corruption of the boot sector on the computer it was originally installed on, I no longer have access to the physical media or the serial number (it was registered on my behalf by my late stepdad so I can't claim the adobe account). at least photoshop cs2 serial numbers are publicly accessible via adobe. I miss playing with after effects though. I'm gonna have to check out blackmagic design's compositing software to go along with davinci resolve.
@@TravisFabel but you don't "own" it. You pay a license to use it.
1:25 "There's like a rat hair in there" Really blew your chance at a mouse pun there...
Maybe that is the joke😮
He touched a Linus ball hair.
It was stuck to the ball too 🙈
@@hardlyworgen71 his only fans is looking great rn.
Sad sarah noise
That "custom" filter is actually really powerful once you figure it out- it's essentially a really, really basic version of the code behind a ton of modern filters, and can do everything from smoothing to edge finding (but it only works at a really low resolution) Each box is a pixel around the "target" pixel, -1 means "increase contrast vs this one", 1 means "blend with this pixel", values between or outside that let you do more exotic weighted contrasts and blends.
mathematically, it has to do with convolution, I believe. A convolution is an operation that can be applied to a matrix (image). The filter that can be customized is called the kernel whose values can be adjusted to achieve different effects in the convolved image.
I'm happy I read these comments. My curiosity is definitely spiking! 🤔
Yes, as a computer vision researcher, I can confirm that. In theory by combination of convolution operations, you can achieve ANY image effect you want (well, except those are not achievable by normal kernels like the median filter). I'm surprised and also kind expecting that this is customizable in Photoshop.
This option essentially lets you edit the convolution matrix that is applied over each image pixel when you select a filter. The one we saw in the video with the four -1s around the 5 in the middle was the kernel for the sharpen filter (or edge detection, Im not sure). Square blur would be a normalised matrix with equal entries everywhere.
I am honestly a bit surprised that the guy who works with photoshop every day seemingly did not know this.
I was 100% convinced the misspelling of “Address” was on purpose... then Niko said he didn’t notice until Linus mentioned it. xD
I honestly didn't notice it either. I could tell something was off but I was too distracted by, y'know, the rest of it.
---> Graphic Designer and I saw that RIGHT THE BLIP AWAY... and clients give Me RIGHTEOUS S**T for glitches like that. I was straight up wondering if "was that on purpose??? Is it the actual channel name, or is Niko goofin'...?"
not gonna lie, i have no problem with there, they're, and their. But add, ad, and how many Ds go in address, those mess me up every single time
The Custom filter actually allows you to write your own convolution matrix, that's pretty cool!
So all those filters like Blur, Sharpen etc. were done with specific values in such a matrix, but nowadays you don't even need to know how they work internally.
was just gonna point that out myself, that's really neat that they let you just input your own convolution matrix back then if you wanted to.
Really impressive how featureful v1 was.
damn..
i always wanted to learn to use this back in the day
Glad to see someone else thought that was cool too. I was surprised to see something that 'technical' in photoshop, regardless of version.
For those looking to go deeper into the topic, I think this 8 minute video from Computerphile does a good job of that: ruclips.net/video/C_zFhWdM4ic/видео.html
It may help you understand what that Custom Filter tool is actually doing.
Does modern photoshop still support custom convolution matrices?
I'm disappointed we didn't get a reaction of the Middle Child Syndrome art because that one was actually pretty rad. Peter's the man.
We can only hope they'll actually put this art on their album.
I'd pay top dollar for that NFT
i won't be surprised if that kind of artstyle starts appearing on today's album covers
Right?? That’s the only reaction I was really interested and in seeing.
@@nobody7817 yep I could agree with ya, mate!
So when I was only 8 years old my Mom was involved in a small business that digitally retouched photos back in the early 90s. This was the tech I remember them using. It seems really antique now, but I remember they could get amazing results back in the day
Guys... your toy was my powerhouse back in the 90s. We used to think ‘how can it possibly get better than this?’. In fact there was a guy at an Adobe presentation who said ‘to an unborn generation, this will be as easy as using crayons’... you’ve proved that he wasn’t lying.
Yep, it was such a jump up in power, at a really good price. I had several at work... loved 'em.
I remember cleaning those bloody mice. I was always dropping the ball on the floor.
@@vercoda9997 oh dude for a second I thought you meant actual bloody mice
This was shit back in the 1990's I remember the horror. The first jelly coloured CRT iMac was a god send in comparison.
@@brokeandtired At the time this Mac replaced type-setting, wax machines and paste boards so was cutting edge and showed a glimpse of the unknown future we were moving into. The first iMac made these seem like they were going backwards by comparison and was singlehandedly the sole reason that Apple made it out of bankruptcy (2nd the Steve Jobs returning of course). I was freelancing in the UK at the time and all the agencies were mass purchasing the Bondi Blue iMacs. Fast forward to today’s M1s and it seems unimaginable.
They really haven't changed that menu in 30+ years 🤣 its the same in Premiere Pro as well !
It works, why change it 🤷🏼♂️
If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it
If it rolls, stay rolling
They did add hex to it.
If good, keep good
* Niko chatting with Linus *
Sam: ._.
It been said in other videos. That Niko is the partner who talks to other channels and people. Where as Sam is more reserved with the work
Sam still loves RED
*First I saw LINUS! in a prank 4090 Graphics card videos, and now here?* Looks like he's exploring everything!
I was wondering if it would be awkward because of their weird calling him out before.
Sam is badbadass
8:00 this is a custom filter matrix that you can fill in, basically telling the computer how to calculate the new pixel (and it's neighbour) base on the matrix. I learnt about it in Computer Graphic class few years ago, never would imagine that it would become useful now that we have traveled back in time to use the original PTS.
is the 2D kernel used in a convolution
GIMP has basically the same dialog "somewhere"
@@sarowie "Convolution Matrix". You can easily implement Sobel Laplace, Gaussian blur, just by changing the coefficients.
Former IT Administrator here just saying this video made my entire year. See you guys mess with this old piece made me super happy. Reminds me of the my old Pentium days with DOS. :)
windows.exe FTW!!
Lawn Mower Man on the big floppies mmmmmmmm
Really cool idea getting fans involved at the end there
i see your comments everywhere lol
Absolutely, I'd love to see more Fiverr challenges. Maybe challenges like Fiverr requests in 5 mins, photoshop only using non-dominant hand and no shortcuts, photoshop while wearing upside down goggles, etc.
@@Backyardwrenching1243 i watch a lot of youtube
@@VEE3RDEYE same. Cool to see your channel everywhere lol
Burn in hell comment stealer
Honestly that Lost Watch pic is so retro janky that it would work million times better than any of the generic synthwave album covers.
If that had been a Daft Punk album, I totally would have believed that was the cover for it.
"This is where you put the save button"
Never change
Props for the historical accuracy of including the inevitable Hair-Wound-Around-The-Mouse-Ball-Roller.
the Question was it included on purpose or was it just included? Because functionality.
So, when I was in high school, l was extraordinarily privileged to have a Mac, very similar to that one, in the art department (key word there is “a”) with Photoshop 2.0 on it (also pre-layers). The art department also had an actual digital camera then (a Polaroid something, VERY basic point and shoot). No one knew anything about it or touched it except me. I loved that Mac. I just want to say Thank You and everyone over at LTT for giving me a huge trip of nostalgia. And a shout out to Mrs. H my old Photography teacher!
Great story, thank you for sharing! I’m glad you really liked the videos and got to remember that from your past
The fact that they both made the save button joke is hilarious
The custom filter is for setting a custom kernel that can be used to perform convolution with the image. With this you can do edge detection, blurring, improve sharpness, etc! Pretty cool stuff!
I literally shouted, "Holy shit!", when I saw that. I can't imagine normal end users ever having to enter the values for custom kernels nowadays. To anybody without the necessary math training, it definitely would look cryptic when entering the matrix elements in that interface
@@aether9083 same here, and I just used Custom Filter in Blackmagic Fusion for my work earlier hahaha
It really surprised me, that's an amazing feature for someone that likes to fiddle around!
I remember the first time I saw layers in Photoshop. They freaked me out to the point I was like "well, can't do digital art anymore I guess, this is way beyond me."
Yeah, I'm still at that point to this day
That maintancence issues cover looks like it would be the raddest album that only your weird friend knows about
@Qimodis joe.
This is taking me back to fifth grade in ‘95. The other kids and the teacher were amazed when I drew Spider-man and Venom by using a mouse.
Do you still have the image?
@@TheLegoJungle my fifth grade teacher might? I haven’t seen him or spoken with him in years. I might have it on my old Macintosh computer I have stored in a closet. I haven’t turned that thing on in 15 years.
@@elvis7094 Turn it ON!
@@elvis7094pretty please
I love how pissed Sam looks in the background during the call lmao
"They haven't changed this menu 30 years!"
Can't fix what's not broken.
**Laughs in Autodesk**
Well that's just how colours work. Most logical way to show the spectrum.
Actually the phrase is 'why fix what's no broken', you can indeed try to 'fix' what isn't broken, that's how we end up with shitty remakes like the american Oldboy, the CGI-ridden The Thing remake, live action Mulan etc.
@@cenciende9401 the original phrase is still absolutely correct. You can't fix what's not broken. The examples you gave were trying (emphasis on trying) to fix mistakes that weren't there in the first place, and therefore failed horribly. "Why fix what's not broken" is also a correct phrase, but the first one is much more suitably applicable here
DON'T CHALLENGE THEM, THEY WILL FIND A WAY!!!
OH MAN THIS MAKES YOU APPRECIATE ALL THE OLD SCHOOL FILMAKERS WHO WENT ABOVE AND BEYOND WITH SO LITTLE TECH ADVANCES IN THIS FIELD
Why the caps King.
calm down with your comment sir, mr purple.
I think they talked about possibly the oldest cgi in film in one of their videos.
Basically every movement had to be mathematically inputted.
Yes every movement.
ruclips.net/video/0AcMp9JJ8q0/видео.html
It's pretty insane how much technology has improved over the years. What we're capable of now is so exponentially more than it was just a couple decades ago. And none of it would be possible without all the extremely intelligent people pathing the way for the rest of us.
7:55 The custom effect seems to be showing a convolution matrix editor, where you could create your own blur or sharpening effects, by specifying how much each pixel bleeds into it's neighbours.
Yeah, really reminded me of Kirsch edge-detection (except, of course, everything. The only likeness is really pretty much only the kernel, since that is how blurring is done too)
Does make me wonder if that windows could be used to make custom effects advanced enough to run all 8 kirsch kernels though, and getting the max like you want. Or if you need to run 8 different effects and blend them somehow.
Sam: sees Marathon; "Okay guys, take a vacation; I'll be sitting here until you come back as my 8-year-old self"
"We've got... VGA to DVI!"
Oh, you sweet summer child.
I love how they are just hanging out on the floor like a group of kids
Floor gang
@@PsPmoddedOUT #Floorgang
Next collab: Linus judges you on your ability to make a real hacking scene that is both realistic and not completely boring. That's way harder than you'd guess.
Make sure Anthony is involved and I'm totally on board with this idea.
Depends on your definition on the starting point, the recon phase could be interesting followed by social engineering etc
Actually it's pretty easy if you're doing more than just trying sql injections. Like there's so much inspiration from something like Stuxnet that would be pretty thrilling.
@@creativeanvil2783 Most people don't think of the social engineering without a direct technical attack on tech hardware and software as 'hacking', even though 'meat hacking' is very much critical to most exploits.
@@lobtyu Not sure exactly what you mean, but something like a little poke and prod on a search field and the 'aha' moment when it spits out a result it shouldn't would be cool, if you could get people to understand that the result was key to an exploit. We tech savvy might see a prompt at the root path and think "we're IN!", but most 'normies' would be oblivious. The Social Network did a good job of this just in dialog when talking about Mark's tricks to get the 'facebooks' of various dorms to spit out results of searches showing EVERYONE's pics, by entering a null search (hitting Search/Enter on an empty search field).
"What's the oldest version of Photoshop you've worked with?" "I dunno, CS2, CS3"
...I have never felt so old -_-
This has to be the most unexpected collab to ever happen
Indeed
Corridor and Linus are OG YT creators and already collabbed on other content :D like when they played spyfall on NODE
Nope it’s not you are totally wrong and don’t deserve the 178 likes you got
Well corridor appeared one or two times at LTT channel
ruclips.net/video/0AcMp9JJ8q0/видео.html
For anyone wondering what custom does at 7:56, my guess is that it is a custom convolution matrix. An image is basically a 2D matrix and we basically have standard convolution matrices which we convolve with the image for different effects like Gaussian blur. By setting a custom convolution matrix, you can convolve basically anything. Yep, there's lots and lots of math behind these apps.
Having read that, I’m still wondering. 😂
@@arothmanmusic Here's the best ELI5-ish I could do quickly: the convolution matrix is a grid of numbers, and what a filter basically does is go over the entire image and calculate new color values for the pixels using the values of the convoltion matrix and the values of the pixels around it. Here it would only use the four immediate neighbors, but usually it's more. So it puts the center cell of this grid (in this case with the value 5) over the first pixel, then maths happen, then it goes on to the next pixel and does the same thing again. Rinse and repeat for the entire image and you have your filter.
you are right. there is a video by Zach Star "The Applications of Matrices | What I wish my teachers told me way earlier" that explains exactly that at the second half of the video if interested
[Insert Visible Confusion here]
I love the costume filter at 8:04 It is a matrix that is moved over the image pixel by pixel and calculates the new pixel value as a weighted sum of its neighbors with the weights that you defined in the pop up window (the mathematic procedure is called a convolution)
I kinda refuse to believe that none of those CG guys have any clue what it is. That stuff is only one of the fundamental building blocks of image processing and computer vision.
@@nahco3994 I was kind of surprised and a little bit shocked as well.
But maybe some if them knew what it was and only Griffin didn't. Maybe a short explanation got lost in the edit...
@@nahco3994 you don't necessarily have to know how something works once it's advanced and modern enough for you to be able to pick it up and use it as intended. For example, most videographers and photographers are not required to know how a camera captures images, only that ISO and shutter speeds are a thing and how they influence the end result. A lot of people use PC's also but most have no idea about the command prompts that used to start up old computers and why they would need to be there to begin with. I don't think it's that surprising. They never had to use them so. Not that I don't think basic knowledge might be useful to better understand how a more advanced software might behave based on the ground knowledge, or that they couldn't perhaps improve their own skills in complex computer graphics by getting some of the basics down first.
When Sam mentioned Marathon I nearly jumped out of my seat. I love every Bungie game
As an Apple fan, I still get angry that Bungie abandoned Apple to develop for Microsoft’s XBox. Curse you, Bill Gates!
Niko: What’s the oldest version of Photoshop you’ve used
Griffin: I think the oldest I’ve used is CS2 or CS3
Me: (Dusts off disc with Photoshop 5 on it) Hello, old friend!
Photoshop 3.0,that's when layers were introduced and PSD files (I think).
*Video idea:* Can a modern videographer use a 30 year old camera to recreate a modern action scene?
you mean like make a corridor crew video but on 16mm film?
While a camera from 1991 would require them scanning the film to digital for editing (the best I could find for the first digital cinema camera was the Panasonic DVX100 in 2002, but digital cinema cameras had been used in the professional sphere since the late 90's), most of what's done in modern action movies is a product of editing. You'd be working off a more limited base (no digital cameras saving all the raw data rather than an unchangeable video file), but the editing tech is really where the differences would present themselves. Some directors still shoot on film now, it's not improbable. Using editing software from 30 years ago would be a different story...
@@drpibisback7680 I think editing was originally going through miles of film, cutting and splicing where needed. That would make it a little bit more difficult. And time consuming.
I'm not sure how far back you can stretch this idea. They talk a lot on vfx react. Artists would have had the same tools, or comparable tools as of today, but it took a looong time to process anything, or animate anything, or rotoscope anything. To be fair, it would be like they would work a month to have the same result as a speed challenge of 15 min on modern machines with modern software.
considering the fact that they still shoot movies on film today because film still has better resolution than even 4k.
yea
it would be a relatively simple deal to shoot on a 30 year old camera.
in fact i'm fairly certain they do since the cameras are so expensive but so robust
Here’s a fixed version of the saying: “It doesn’t matter what tools you use, it’s the artist that matters... to an extent”
It all makes me think of those RUclipsrs who spend hours setting up all their lights, mics and cameras before starting a video where they explain that "Gear doesn't matter!".
I prefer "its the fool not the tool"
@@Albanez39 I think it's always implied that you have to have some basics like lighting and a decent camera and then it's about the person, who then can turn around and get even better stuff
Two RUclips channels with the most ridiculously awesome sponsor segments/segways collaborating together. It's beautiful.
So, this is what happens when two dream companies come together to make a video!
Except two opposite trends. As Corridor has been leaning more into the technical aspects of things and having deep dive instructional, Linus has been severely dumbing down his content. He used to explain wave functions, now he explains how to figure out what's the top of the USB drive.
okay but “what the clouds can see” looks so cool, it would totally fit with like a Bill Wurtz song
Duuuuddddeee I love that guyyy
I worked on a LCII for years. You can run photohop 3.1 in there which introduced layers and is a much better tool than 1.0, but it's biggest tools were Freehand and Quark. You may think that stuff was slow, but you have to compare it to working using photocopies, which was the way we did that when I studied design.
"no pen tool" - yes, the pen aka Freehand Tool was invented by the competing software, Freehand, and was so superior to every other drawing tool that Adobe bought out the company so they could use it.
Aldus Freehand! Man, I'd forgotten about that, if you had Photoshop back then, you probably had Freehand.
Adobe had a pen tool way before they bought Freehand from Macromedia though
Naaaww first it was not invented by Freehand. But it was the first one in a more streamlined package. And no they did not buy Aldus to get it. They had their own version long before in illustrator which was released in 87 one year before freehand.
Also Adobe never got freehand in the first place. When they merged with aldus the antitrust deemed that the rights of free hands should be returned to its owner abs then it was sold to macromedia.
@@kwerk2011 Yep, I learned on Freehand, then Adobe bought it and killed it in favor of Illustrator.
That moment when you realize you might actually be older than everyone working at corridor....
I was actually impressed by the quality of the Prince Of Persia graphics compared to my old Tandy version.
Oh, I know! Him saying his earliest Photoshop was CS2? I started on PS 9! XD
I guess it also depends how young you started. My dad taught graphics so I first used Photoshop 7 back when I was about 7 years old 😂
@@brankin421 Step back peasant! When i began my apprenticeship, my teacher was really happy about the new pen feature added in PS 2 ;)
@@xxJOKeR75xx :O
17:21 Niko rapping 🔥
I've worked in VFX for over a quarter-century, and this machine is very close to where I started (8-bit machines)
It's so great of Niko to still give his time to Corridor even while his rap career as Young Gravy continues to blow up.
What are u talking about
i never realized the resemblance 🤣
Lmao I see it now
@@adonishomefitness There's a rapper named Yung Gravy and, at least to me, the resemblance between he and Niko is uncanny.
Remember that scene from Apollo 13 when they have to quickly double check some calculations and everyone whips out their SLIDE RULES?
This is several models more advanced than the Macs I learned on.
(breaks hip, leaves chat)
My hip feels this comment too.
Oh god you poor thing
The first Mac I was working with was PowerMac 7500. Plus Photoshop 3.0-4.0, CorelDraw 3.0, and Wacom ArtPad. That was my college day way back in the late 90s. So, definitely a couple generations newer than what Linus send to Corridor Crews.
Yeah, i grew up learning on a Apple IIc+ machine (one of those old black and green monitors. Only game was "lemonade stand"). We upgraded to a Performa 575 when i was around middle school. Eventually i got tired of the low RAM so i upgraded the 5MB RAM to add 128MB. Didn't get around to PC until we had a whopping 333Mhz system my dad got through work, and never went back to mac since
@@SurgStriker me too....remember drawing a circle you had to tell the turtle to goforward1 left1 x 360...... then it would make sort of a circle with one nearly straight line up the side...
"doom..." Proceeds to show Duke nukem
“They haven’t changed this freakin menu in like 30 years” 🤣🤣🤣
And it still takes up way too much screen space!
7:18 I love how everyone's in awe of a bunch of squiggles
This just proves how talented everyone at Corridor is
at 8:15 the the filter box with all the positive and negative numbers is called a CONVOLUTION FILTER KERNEL which is a 3x3, 5x5 or 7x7 matrix that lets you accentuate or diminish the value of the pixel that the convolution filter is centred over. A Convolution Kernel multiples, divides, adds and subtracts all the values input into the box by the individual RGB or greyscale pixel values that are in the centre and the surrounding pixel values of the convolution kernel
You run a left to right and top to bottom scanning run of all pixels in an image and multiply the individual colour channel values of each pixel with all the surrounding pixels so you get a FILTERED version of that centre pixel value. You can find edges (i.e. Canny or SOBEL), filter out high frequency or super bright pixels (i.e. Hi-Pass filter) or all low frequency or super-dark pixels (i.e. Lo-Pass Filter). You can even get rid of specific pixel luminance, saturation or hues by using a Notch-based convolution kernel.
The numbers you type in are merely multiplication, division, addition and subtraction factors that send a pixel value up or down on one or more RGB colour channels or HSL channels depending on what TYPE of pixel values you are filtering.
Now you know!
V
I was wondering why Linus' new channel had Adress the whole time until they asked Niko why it was spelled wrong 😂😂
5:52 Everyone's reaction when something nostalgic from their childhood comes back to them without warning.
I remember not having layers and what an insane update it was when they were introduced. I also remember waiting 24 hours for a filter to finish computing. Now it'd be basically instant. Times have changed.
Unless you do a mean curvature blur with 245 iterations then it’s 10 mins
I'm not even in my 20s yet and knowing that 1990 was 30 years ago scares me.
atleast you are a genious at Math.
Yeah, it's weird how the 60's, 70's, 80's and 90's were completely different but ever since the "modern" 90's everything has pretty much stayed the same. Obviously technology has evolved but general fashion and pop culture hasn't changed much at all.
Like, I was a teenager in the 90's and I hated the 80's synth pop music and the fluro and pastel coloured clothes and perm and mullet hairstyles. The 90's was black and grey and more "sophisticated" and we have been more or less the same ever since
Ikr. I am born in -89. So for me growing up, everything from the 70's was "30 years old"
Now I have to face the truth that my childhood is as far away as that seemed to me back then... Fml
I was 25 in 1990, imagine how I feel.
@@Wistbacka Your childhood is only as far away as all the unforgettable memories in your heart are 😘 haha
Can we just all appreciate how corridor make all their sponsor segments enjoyable. I legit watch them every time.
Yup
Jake does every sponsored segment, right? Does he ever hang out with the crew any more?
@@mc_va he lives in texas right now, working for corridor as part of their production or whatever. Occasionally he comes back to LA to the office!
I appreciate the timer on screen for ease of skipping it. ;)
i use the sponder segment to scroll the comments
That was seriously impressive how much a 30 year old app could do
I encountered a guy recently that still fired up an old Powermac every so often because there was an old piece of software he used that did not have a good modern equivalent.
It's an executable program not an app, show your lack of world knowledge harder Zoomer
@@topogigio7031 what are u even saying lol
@@topogigio7031 I hope you're not serious kek
@@topogigio7031 wow you really get a hard on from calling people zoomers don't you? This is like the 3rd comment of yours I've read about this on two separate threads. The superiority complex on this one lmao
1:23 Wren: "There's a hair in it!"
But Wren, aren't you the guy that always puts stuff in his mouth?
Back in elementary school I would go through pixel by pixel editing pictures in MS Paint because we didn’t have photoshop on the school computers. Took so damn long and barely looked presentable but I was proud of it
imagine if you had a program for pixel art XD
I once got relatively good results using paintbrush in Windows because that's all I had. I found the trick was to make your image much larger than the default size and when viewed fullscreen it doesn't have that unblended look as bad as the smaller images.
8:00 the fact that they don’t know what that is but i do makes me feel powerful
Honestly seeing the title made me so happy
Seeing Niko make that dumb little spelling mistake was actually really cathartic for me, it's the kind of thing that I would do (and have done on jobs) and I tend to have a lot of anxiety around making those sort of mistakes. I guess its nice to be reminded that even those you look up to are flawed humans (just like me) and everyone has brain farts sometimes
I assumed he did it on purpose, to go with the janky artwork.
@@caernavon Way to crush some hopes and dreams.
@@caernavon ehhh I don't know man, his reaction seemed pretty genuine when linus pointed it out
When I first saw it I immediately noticed it was misspelled... but then I started questioning if it really was right and I was just remembering it wrong haha. Derp moments like that happen a lot, and wouldn't be surprised at all if that lasted for Niko all the way to showing it to Linus
That's how you spell address in Swedish (adress) so you could just say you chose to write in a different language for aesthetics.
8:01 - That's how an image filter looks like mathematically, it's a matrix used to calculate the value of a pixel (correspondent to the central element of the matrix, in this case 5) using the original pixel value and the values of the pixels around it. The matrix is scanned through the whole image (convolution). The known filter like Gaussian, Blur, etc all work like this, their result is determined by the values of the matrix elements. This window allows you to create your own filter, a super cool thing considering that today to do the same thing you have to manually open the file as a matrix and code your own filter and convolution, for example in Python or C++.
It's hard to believe they don't know it because it's the most basic concept of digital image processing.
VFX Artists try to use 3D Studio for DOS (one of the first 3d animation softwares from the early 90s)
We used the very first version on a 386 with a Targa card. It was simply awful, even then, but it was light years better than anything else on Dos.
"This is where you put your save button" 😂
I wonder if keyboard shortcuts were a thing even if the save button looks like that . No Ctrl+z and saving sounds like a BAD time.
ruclips.net/video/0AcMp9JJ8q0/видео.html
@@markpetrov9476 what? How? How are you Zoomers this dumb? You don't get a GUI Task Manager without the classic Ctrl + Alt + Delete
Next Zoomers gonna be like "Did you know there was AIR back in 1999?"
@@topogigio7031 "You're dumb for not knowing how computers worked a decade before you were born"
This was the most wholesome collaboration I’ve seen.
Wow, I remember using Photoshop 1 back in the day. The airbrush is your friend. To do any sort of layered composite images, you had to line it up as best you could, get it where you want and deselect, then use the airbrush to tease one color towards another along the edges to soften that harsh unblended edge... like.. manually blending literally one pixel at a time by eyesight. This brings back so many memories, lol!
One pixel at a time was the key to everything back then!
I clicked so many pixels back then. For complex compositions I remember having another canvas open where different parts would live in their own section of white space. When I updated a part I would then lasso it over to the main canvas. Closest thing to layers I could do I guess.
"They have a bounding box, It's just like the real thing." It's Photoshop 1.0 IT IS THE REAL THING...
*bounding
Yeah 1.0 is kinda THE real thing
I thought the same thing, that is THE bounding box!
Man I really wanted to see that guy who loved marathon get to play it for a second
I got a kick out of that. Man, I loved Marathon so much. It's fun and atmospheric and there's an incredible depth to the story. If anyone is curious or feeling nostalgic, check out the Aleph One project, it makes Marathon playable on modern computers, and all the game files were freely released by Bungie, so you can legally play the whole series.
reveroF nohtaraM
@@Gracana hell yeah!
I was SO waiting for a Marathon clip. I would have to kick my kids off the computer playing that so I could freakin' work.
This was so great! Would love to see some sort of follow up video showing what artists from the 90’s were able to actually do with photoshop 1. Maybe interview or show some work from that era.
Omg yes! I would love to see something like that
07:35 *"Custom" is for manually defining a matrix (aka "kernel" or "mask") for 2D convolution.* It's a very basic but extremely powerful algorithm. Most of the factory filters (blur, sharpen, find edges, ...) are most likely using the same algorithm behind the scenes, just by plugging different values into that matrix.
It works like this: Each pixel in the image is "convolved" separately with the kernel. You take the neighborhood around it, as big as the kernel (here: 5×5 pixels). Then, you multiply the brightness value of each pixel in that area by the corresponding value in the kernel, and finally all those get added together to get the new value for one pixel in the resulting image. Then, the kernel "slides" to the next pixel, and the procedure is repeated.
(Usually the resulting value has to be "normalized" by dividing it by the sum of values in the kernel, to keep the overall brightness the same and fit into the 0.0-1.0 (or 0-255) value range again.)
*Examples:*
1 in the center surrounded by 0s does not change the image.
All 0s except a 1 just above the center shifts the image up by 1 pixel.
All 1s gives you a box blur.
If you decrease the values around the center with a roughly circular falloff it looks nicer, e.g. for Gaussian blur (3×3):
1 2 1
2 4 2
1 2 1
The "Sharpen" kernel uses negative values and looks like this:
0 -1 0
-1 5 -1
0 -1 0
And a simple vertical edge detector (the "Prewitt operator") that lights up when brightness changes from left to right:
1 0 -1
1 0 -1
1 0 -1
The blog Programathically has a good explanation with images, which makes the idea probably much easier to understand.
Idk why but the an old Apple computer "clearing it's throat" to boot up had me dying.
"Custom filter" is showing you an image processing kernel/convolution matrix. Essentially it's telling the program how to modify any given pixel based on the pixels surrounding it. The center cell (the one with 5) is the pixel it is currently processing, the cells surrounding it is it's neighbours. It's current config [[0,-1,0],[-1,5,-1],[0,-1,0]] is an edge detection configuration.
The dithering has a special quaintness to it that makes me feel strangely good
Worth mentioning that the Mac featured in this video was basically the lowest-end Mac on the market and was generally consigned to the educational market. The high end of 1990 included a system, with 40Mhz 68040, that could accommodate six GPUs and [eventually] 128MB of RAM.
frfr "LC" unofficially stood for "low cost", it was the eMac/Mac Mini of it's time.
I'm going to correct myself, though, because I made a mistake and for some reason am unable to edit my original comment: I meant to say that the high end of 1990 included a Mac that had a 40Mhz 68030 - not 68040. The first Mac with a 68040 came out in 1991. Either way, my argument still stands.
Mentions DOOM, shows Duke Nukem
Also Marathon is absolutely incredible
Marathon changed my life lol. My friend had two Macs at his house and we would play it literally from morning til night.
@@beergnomedc I only played the series this last year and it’s so far advanced from DOOM and Duke it was shocking
Neither of those have objectives and a thorough story the way Marathon does and out of the three only Duke and Marathon are trying to feel like real spaces instead of just a maze of corridors.
That thing got Lode Runner tho?
Jddkso
Still have my Lode Runner box and disk. Blows my mind to know that Broderbund is still around.
0:13 Wren narrowly avoids getting chopped by the ceiling fan as he leaps over the desk.
The fan seems pretty far back behind him thooough. Or just me?
I like how the guy who requested the group picture edited was genuinely mad at them
Anthony Young appreciation thread!! We all love that man, so wholesome, so knowledgeable
"This goes on a construction site!"
Never change, Wren.
I love how the sponsored segments aren’t boring and I actually get interested and entertained
Yeah, corridor is sponsor segments master
In the Custom.. Filter 08:10 you can actually type in your own matrix to be applied to your Image used as Filter
I made the cut! Thanks Niko and crew for our one-of-a-kind janky art piece. Perhaps now I’ll go sell it as an NFT? 😂 With no context, I was really scratching my head trying to figure out what y’all were up to. I thought maybe you were testing some AI software that generated the photo, but nah, just a 30 year old Mac and Photoshop 1.0. Hilarious!
To be fair, when you pay some of the best VFX artists for a job, and they hand you that monstrosity... You have to be scratching your head.
@@CrushedSpirits Well it was $5, so my expectations weren’t very high. Haha. I knew there was some gimmick.
Same, man. I was so damn confused while recording my reaction hahaha. Will definitely make a good story for the podcast.
@@nyaaanjake I was super confused recording mine as well! I made my buddy who hadn't seen it yet sit on the couch with me for a more natural reaction haha!
"We got this old machine! Better play video games on it immediately."
First thing I did with a Mac emulator? Gizmos and Gadgets. My childhood!
This is hilarious. I would like to see you guys progressively move forward with different hardware and see what you can make as tech got better.
13:54 Niko using his thumb drive to manually remove nose files.
( don't blink or you will miss it )
I just have to say 14:38 is the best Sam laugh I've ever heard.