Animator originates back to its author's
Jim Kent earlier program
Cyber Paint for the
Atari ST.
Jim Kent evolved in 1989 his software into
Animator for
Gary Yost's "Yost Group" for
80286 PCs with
MS-DOS.
Animator was then licensed to
Autodesk, who published the software as
Autodesk Animator.
Releases Animator was debuted at
SIGGRAPH 1989, featuring a VGA
graphics mode of
320×200 pixels with
256 colors. In July 1991, the successor
Animator Pro was released, with the significant improvement of allowing almost any resolution and
color depth. The software was sold for approximately US$800 (US$1,800 in 2025), significantly more expensive than the previous version, addressing the professional audience. The 1995 released
Animator Studio was a complete re-write for
Windows 95, but was not anymore developed by the Yost Group.
Discontinuation and legacy Eventually
development of the product ended and support was discontinued by Autodesk. The
trademark for "Autodesk Animator", filed on December 18, 1989, expired on July 21, 1997. Jim Kent kept
copyrights to the 300,000 lines
source code base of Animator Pro, and allowed it to be made available publicly under the
open-source BSD license in 2009. The original 256 color
Animator version for DOS is also provided as a
freeware download. After some initial
code review porting to modern platforms was started on
GitHub. As of April 2014 most of the
assembly language source code had been ported to
platform-agnostic C code and
SDL was used as the target back-end framework. == Reception ==