Tom Hudson | |
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Occupation | Computer programmer |
Known for |
3D Studio CAD-3D DEGAS |
Tom Hudson is an American computer programmer best known for co-creating the 3D modeling and animation package 3D Studio (which became 3D Studio Max, then Autodesk 3ds Max) as well as creating its precursor, CAD-3D for the Atari ST.
From 1982 until 1985, Hudson was a technical editor for Atari 8-bit computer magazine ANALOG Computing. While at ANALOG, he wrote a number of machine language games printed as type-in programs, including Fill 'er Up (based on Qix),Livewire! (based on Tempest), Retrofire, Planetary Defense (co-written with Charles Bachand) and Fire Bug (co-written with Kyle Peacock). All games were accompanied by the assembly language source code.
In 1982, Hudson developed Buried Bucks (stylized as Buried Buck$), an action game sold commercially by the magazine under the name ANALOG Software.Buried Bucks was licensed to Imagic who re-released it in 1984 as Chopper Hunt. In ANALOG Computing issue 8, Hudson presented a program called Graphic Violence! which creates visuals similar to the expanding explosions in Atari's 1980 Missile Command arcade game. That effect is used in both Buried Bucks and Planetary Defense.
In 1984 he wrote a 3D object viewer called Solid States for the Atari 8-bit line, published in ANALOG. The Atari BASIC program lets the user enter a series of 3D points, then a series of lines connecting them, and displays the result as a wireframe. The objects themselves are created on graph paper.
Hudson left ANALOG when the Atari ST was introduced in 1985 and developed the paint program DEGAS, published by Batteries Included in 1986. He created an enhanced version, DEGAS Elite, released in 1987.
After DEGAS, Hudson wrote CAD-3D for the Atari ST, published by Antic Software (run by Gary Yost), which was later renamed Cyber Studio. CAD-3D started as a port of Solid States to the Atari ST. Hudson abandoned the Atari ST when expected improvements in the hardware did not occur. Working with Yost, Jack Powell, and Dan Silva, "The Yost Group" developed 3D Studio for MS-DOS-based PCs, published in 1990 by Autodesk. The animated short Cornerstone, which shipped with 3D Studio, was created by Hudson.