You have to understand that this is... this is a... an amazingly collaborative... open information medium that we're in. That there is no such thing... and that there should never be any such thing as trade secrets. There should be nothing like that. That's should all be open. We find, discover something, we should be so proud of it, we should invite everybody in to take a look at it. The way you got all of us on to the stage at Playa to watch how... you know, your movie Avatar was, was just starting out. It-it-and this is how we discover these things. So... yeah... I'll take credit for being open-minded enough to say to Dennis Muren - "Okay we're gonna change the paradigm... We gonna shoot all of Jurassic Park digitally. You know, with digital dinosaurs." And ah... And there is only 60 shots in the movie, you know. There is only 60 digital dinosaur shots in all of Jurassic Park. There is like 350 Stan Winston puppets. So Stan Winston has the majority of credit for Jurassic Park. But ah... but those 60 shots kind of started a whole new era.
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Yeah, but the balance continuously shifted away from prosthetics and more towards...
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...digital in the subsequent Jurassic Park films. Right?
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Right... right... because the second Jurassic Park film that I directed had 180 digital shots.
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Yeah. But your point is, is absolutely critical. You know, that a... if we are, if we're as Open Source as we can be, it's, it's... it's enlightening self-interest. Other people are gonna go, advance the, the... you know, the technique. And the next time we want to do something, solve a special problem, somebody else would have figured out how to do it. You know, when I wrote Avatar I didn't know how to make it. And nobody did. But I knew that other people would be figuring out all the pieces of it. That over time... All I had to do is wait. You know?
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