SEQUENCE VIEW A
SEQUENCE VIEW A
This is a possible entry point for the user. The general design philosophy here is to user the top portion of the frame to be a place for visual references or navigation of the data, while the lower part is a more straight-forward display of various metrics.
This main screen also is able to be adjusted to accommodate other user types, like Executives. Here I'm presenting metrics across all the shots in sequence 900 in one axis, and all the departments contributing to those shots in a second axis of the spreadsheet at the bottom. This data is rolled up in the the Gantt chart at the top. I could just as easily plot all the sequences of a movie in the same way. Or even all movies in a year.
As we "zoom" out, the data becomes more relevant to an executive. As we "zoom" in, it is more relevant to a Supervisor or artist. But whether we zoom out or in, the design remains constant.
SEQUENCE VIEW B
SEQUENCE VIEW B
This is an optional mode in the top portion of the UI that helps create visual context for the data on the bottom. Seeing as how was built for film production, the visual representation is from a movie. Alternate visual representations could be inserted here depending on the type of analysis being done.
ASSET VIEW B
ASSET VIEW B
As we "zoom" in and traverse the strata of data, we can arrive at this level, the shot Asset Level. We've moved from a Sequence, to a shot, and now to an Asset. A molecular component of movie making. At this level we can surface relevant data points to technical artists and Supervisor to better help them understand how long it takes an Asset to render/process before resulting in an image. Memory usage, disk usage, rasterization times, etc. This information, plus the information at the Shot and Sequence levels help determine how much these assets cost and how to balance out their cost vs. their quality.