Mental Images

This article is about the computer graphics software company. For the psychological phenomenon, see Mental image.
Mental Images GmbH
Subsidiary of Nvidia
Industry CGI, Computer software
Founded April 1986, Berlin
Headquarters HQ in Berlin, Germany
Key people
Rolf Herken, President,
CEO and CTO
Products Mental Ray, RealityServer, mental mill, MetaSL, mental mesh, iray, DiCE
Number of employees
80
Parent Nvidia
Website www.mentalimages.com

Mental Images GmbH (stylized as mental images) is a computer generated imagery (CGI) software firm based in Berlin, Germany. The company provides rendering and 3D modeling technology for entertainment, computer-aided design, scientific visualization and architecture.

The company was founded by the physicists and computer scientists Rolf Herken, Hans-Christian Hege, Robert Hödicke and Wolfgang Krüger and the economists Günter Ansorge, Frank Schnöckel and Hans Peter Plettner as a company with limited liability & private limited partnership (GmbH & Co. KG) in April 1986 in Berlin, Germany. The Mental Ray software project started in 1986. The first versions of the rendering software were influenced, tested and used for production by Mental Images' then operating large commercial computer animation division, led by the visual effects supervisors John Andrew Berton (1986-1989), 2000 Academy Award winner John Nelson (1987-1989), and 1996 and 2000 Academy Award nominee Stefen Fangmeier (1988-1990).

In 2003 Mental Images completed an investment round led by ViewPoint Ventures and another large international private equity investor. Since Dec 2007 Mental Images GmbH is a wholly owned subsidiary of the NVIDIA corporation[1] with headquarters in Berlin, subsidiaries in San Francisco (Mental Images Inc.) and Melbourne (Mental Images Pty. Ltd.) as well as an office in Stockholm. After acquisition by NVIDIA the company has been renamed NVIDIA Advanced Rendering Center (NVIDIA ARC GmbH).

Products

Mental Images is the developer of the rendering software Mental Ray, iray, mental mill, RealityServer, and DiCE.

References

  1. mental images

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 15, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.