Anton Maximovsky is president and CEO of Motion Path, a Montreal-based creative services agency that focuses on real-time 3D graphics for television broadcast. Having worked in broadcast graphics for the past 20 years, Anton and his core team at Motion Path witnessed the beginning of real-time 3D graphics. Since then, they have worked with most of the major real-time 3D graphics systems and gained a deep understanding of the technology related to real-time 3D graphics — from virtual sets and camera tracking to data acquisition and management.

“We were pioneers,” says Maximovsky. “There were no manuals, no support or user communities where you could get answers to your problems. We had to figure out everything ourselves. That defined us as a company. Innovation became a normal process.”

Motion Path’s experience, credibility and knowledge of multiple systems have earned it major clients across North America and Europe, including Spike TV, MLB Network, CNBC, NBC News, ABC News, and Russia’s largest broadcaster Match TV. Since its first project, Monday Night Football for ABC Sports, the company has been involved in numerous high-profile projects—from Super Bowls and Olympics Games to US presidential elections for major US networks—receiving industry recognition and multiple design awards along the way.

Creative freedom with Avid tools

To help create these award-winning projects, Motion Path relies on Avid’s comprehensive Studio Suite tools for creating real-time 3D graphics, including 4Designer authoring software, 3DPlay for composing real-time channel branding graphics, Maestro for creating, composing and playing out high-res graphics and animation, and TDControl to control and manage high-res studio displays.

Powered by the MediaCentral Platform, the industry’s most open, tightly integrated and efficient platform designed for media, this toolset gives Motion Path the creative freedom and flexibility to translate its designs into the final graphics that appear on air.

“We consider ourselves an Avid-centered company because everything we do is around Avid technology,” explains Maximovsky. “Avid solutions give us everything we need so that we’re not limited creatively. When our designers start to brainstorm new ideas for new graphics, we don’t need to consider the technology that’s going to be used because we know that whatever the designers come up with we’ll be able to implement on the system—there’s nothing that will hold us back technically. It’s a really powerful platform. Certain things you can do in Avid tools are just impossible to do with the competing tools that exist today.”

A history of firsts

Avid’s Studio Suite has helped Motion Path build on its reputation for innovation and satisfy clients’ increasingly demanding and sophisticated requirements — such as virtual reality, virtual graphics and virtual sets.

In 1999, the company was first to use real-time animated headshots at Super Bowl XXXIII in Miami. In 2015, Motion Path created a combination of augmented reality graphics and multiple virtual scenes to “extend” MLB Network’s studio, creating the appearance of enormous, breathtaking indoor and outdoor sets.

The company continued to push the boundaries of augmented reality for the Euro 2016 soccer championship in France.

“Discovering and innovating is nothing unusual for us — that’s how we always work,” says Maximovsky.

The future of real-time 3D graphics

The recent hype around virtual and augmented reality has helped to shine a spotlight on companies like Motion Path.

“Everyone’s talking about it, which is very positive,” says Maximovsky. “There are still challenges to overcome, but the potential and the promises are there.”

Looking further into the future, Maximovsky predicts that the ever-increasing processing power of the machines that run 3D graphics systems will lead to more sophisticated and calculation-intensive tasks like those in the visual effects industry coming to real-time graphics, including raytracing and the ability to render very complex photorealistic 3D scenes. He also points to technology used in the gaming industry — like real-time 3D engines — that he believes will help continue to drive innovation.

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