It turns out that allowing the software signed by `SFNT Germany GmbH` to load was enough to have the dongle recognized by TV Paint. sion-3524/, that were suggesting a link between the Sentinel driver and this SFNT Germany GmbH thing, so I decided to allow it. After a bit of googling, I found some pages like this one. At first I thought it was some unrelated and older software, because the name was not ringing any bell to me, it seemed especially unrelated to any Safenet or Sentinel software, so I just assumed it had nothing to do with the dongle drivers. Of course after finishing the other steps, the freshly installed TV Paint still would not recognize the dongle.Īt this point I noticed that there was another software trying to load, but its name (as it would appear in `Security & Privacy`) was something like `SFNT Germany GmbH`. When doing the new install, I had to do the thing in the `Security & Privacy` in order to allow the installation of the driver (as specified in the guide), but in a second time, I could not allow the driver to be loaded because there was no `Software from developer "Legacy Software: Safenet"` trying to be loaded that would appear in `Security & Privacy`, and thus I could not allow it to run from the menu. When it came to uninstall the Sentinel drivers installed during the first unworking install, I could not find the `Sentinel` folder in the `Application` folder. er&lang=en, and since it was not working on the first try (dongle not recognized), I followed the part with a red background that was supposed to provide the solution), I was a bit worried because I could not reproduce faithfully and exactly some steps of the guide: After following the detailed instructions on how to install everything on Catalina (dongle driver + TV Paint v11) (. I’ll go into more detail on the figure setup, animation, and compositing process in a future post if anyone is interested.Just a message that might help someone in the same situation than me. Shot using a 1080p Logitech webcam with TV Paint, and composited in After Effects: I used the masking tape as a sticky surface for the feet to tie-down to, and a green Modibot for the rig arm. I did however buy some additional 3D printed parts from Shapeways to modify it to have clavicles and an extra spine joint for better posing.īelow is the first test I did earlier last week. The stock Modibot was only $10 on Amazon! At that price I definitely recommend it as a super inexpensive way to try out stop-motion. It was super hard animating straight ahead without being able to go back to redo poses, but the challenge very addicting!įigure I animated isn’t a pro kinetic stop-motion armature, I was surprised how well the plastic figure could hold a pose. Aside from filming toy action figures, this was the first time trying to do actual stop-motion animation. I’ve been wanting to try this for a long time now. DIY Stop-motion animation I did for fun last week using 2 Modibot figures, green masking tape, and 2 vegetable cutting boards.
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