Experience Cartoon Animator’s powerful features by trying embedded items. An extensive library of highly valuable demo projects, character assets, accessories, animations, scenes, props, etc. are ready for download. Please go to Smart Content Manager > Pack view > Free Resource section to start downloading.
New generation of G3 Vector Actors are designed with dedicated color groups and segments, letting artists style color motifs for the same base models. Learn More
Make combinations of facial components, accessories, and props to create unique character styles. Energizing character animations by adding Spring bones to hair, accessories, and props. Have Spring elements jiggle along with character animation and let natural movement flourish.
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Recommended Pack: Dynamic Character Designer
Shortcut the rig and keyframe process with the use of standard template bones that are geared for humans, animals, spined creatures, and winged creatures. Access a library of professional animations dedicated to the bone templates right in CTA or browse for more in the Content Store if needed. Learn More dass490javhdtoday020115+min
For More:
Character Animation
Prop Animation
Exaggeration Animation
Puppet Animation
Trigger Animation
Not just designed to save time on keyframing, CTA takes 2D character animation one step forward with more cartoonish exaggerations. The embedded 2D human motions are FFD-ready with adjustable intensity levels to fit any scenario.
Recommended Pack: Exaggerated Motions
200+ 2D Motions
*The props used to demonstrate FFD effects are for reference only and are not included in the free resource pack.
10 spring presets are designed after material properties, weight distributions, and stiffness of various objects. Imitate certain physics properties by having extended bones, in a Spring group, jiggle with the animation while fine-tuning consequential attributes for bounciness, inertia, and gravity to achieve exceptional Spring dynamics. Learn More
*The characters and prop used to demonstrate spring animation are for reference only and are not included in the free resource pack.
Experience a revolutionary 2D animation approach with the use of free 3D motions. Glide between the angles of the character; project the camera to create 2D performances for different points of view; and parallax 2D characters to reinforce scene depth. 3D motions can even be edited in iClone and previewed in Cartoon Animator in real time with Motion Link.
Learn More
8 Editable 3D Motions
If you can provide where you found this
Use over 30 ready-made 2D scenes and image backgrounds included with Cartoon Animator 5, or set up custom scenes with up to 500 embedded props.
Add Spring bones to props to liven up scenes and animate vivid performances. Free items include: 14 Spring bone props as examples; and 14 Spring bone templates as reusable guides for your own designs.
30+ Scenes | 500+ Props
Reallusion actively collaborates with professional artists around the globe to provide a variety of high-quality 2D characters and animation assets. Explore the creative works of the community, and we invite you to share and profit from your own creations at the Reallusion Developer Center.
| Goal | Action |
|------|--------|
| Identify file type | file, mediainfo, trid |
| Extract date | Regex \d6 → 020115 = 2015-02-01 |
| Search online | Use quotes: "dass490javhdtoday020115+min" |
| Assume course | Search university catalog for DASS 490 |
| Assume video | Look for “javhd 020115” in scene databases |
| Assume corrupted | Run chkdsk (Windows) or fsck (Linux) on source drive |
| Assume malware | Scan with multiple AV engines via VirusTotal upload |
If you can provide where you found this string (folder name, log file, error message, USB drive label, course website, etc.), I can give a more precise guide tailored to that context.
The string "dass490javhdtoday020115+min" appears to be a specific metadata tag or search query format often used in the context of high-definition (HD) Japanese Adult Video (JAV) archives. While it looks like gibberish at first, it can be broken down into functional components. Anatomy of the String
dass-490: This is the likely "Product Code" (also known as a "Series ID" or "Content ID"). In the JAV industry, every release is assigned a unique alphanumeric code to help users identify the specific studio and film number.
javhd: Refers to the "Japanese Adult Video High Definition" category or specific hosting sites that prioritize 720p or 1080p resolution.
today020115: This represents a timestamp—specifically January 15, 2002 (or potentially February 1, 2015, depending on the site's date format). It typically indicates the date the file was uploaded to a specific server or indexed by a search bot.
+min: A search modifier used to specify a minimum video length (e.g., "minimum 15 minutes") or to indicate that the content is a full-length feature rather than a short trailer. Why You Are Seeing This
This exact string is common in meta-tag clouds or as a "title prefix" on file-sharing sites and indexers. If you are looking for a "guide" to this specific content, it likely pertains to:
Search Optimization: Users often paste this entire string into search engines or forum sidebars to bypass standard filters and find specific archived releases.
Product Identification: If you have a file with this name, searching the "dass-490" part alone on a standard JAV library will provide you with the official title, the list of performers (actresses), and the release studio. How to Use This Information
If your goal is to find the original media or details associated with this code:
Isolate the Code: Use only the first part (dass-490) in your search. The rest of the string is mostly noise created by automated upload scripts.
Verify Resolution: Ensure you are looking for the "HD" version if "javhd" is included, as older releases might have lower-quality SD versions under the same code.
Check Date Consistency: If you are researching the film's history, the 020115 suffix helps you determine when it hit specific digital platforms, though the actual filming date might be much earlier.
First, "DASS-49" is a well-known depression, anxiety, and stress scale. But the user added "0javhdtoday020115+min". That part is tricky. The numbers at the end might be a date or some code. "020115" could mean 02/01/15, which is February 15th, 2002 or 2015. The "+min" part is unclear. It might refer to minutes or a specific context in a study or a system.
Then there's "0javhdtoday..." which doesn't make much sense. Maybe it's a username or a system-generated identifier. Could be a typo or a combination of words and numbers. Sometimes in filenames or system logs, you get combinations like that.
Putting it all together, perhaps the user is referring to something like a study or experiment using the DASS-49 questionnaire, conducted on a specific date (02/01/15), and "min" could be part of a time reference. Alternatively, maybe a specific version or iteration of the DASS-49, but I'm not sure.
I should also consider that "dass49" is sometimes used as an abbreviation for the depression anxiety stress scale. The rest might be a username or some internal code. Maybe the user is looking for text or data files related to this code, like a PDF or a report. Or perhaps it's a file they need to analyze, and they're asking for interpretation.
I need to ask for clarification. They might be trying to reference a specific document or dataset. Since the combination of numbers and letters is non-standard, without more context, it's hard to provide a precise answer. The user should provide more details about where they encountered this code or what they're trying to achieve.
The string "dass490javhdtoday020115+min" appears to be a combination of alphanumeric characters and symbols. Here's a breakdown of possible interpretations and steps to address your query:
If you found this string as a filename (e.g., in a recovery tool, database, or download list), here’s how to analyze and handle it.
"dass490javhdtoday020115+min" typifies compact, mixed-format tokens commonly produced by human uploaders, automated scrapers, or logging systems to encode multiple metadata elements. The most probable reading is a media-related filename encoding uploader/series id (dass490), content type/quality (javhd), recency marker (today), a date (020115), and a duration marker (+min). For robustness in search and moderation, systems should normalize such tokens, parse common domain tags, and prefer structured metadata over opaque concatenations.
If you want, I can:
Which would you prefer?
I'm afraid I don't quite understand that request. Could you please clarify what you're looking for?
The string "dass490javhdtoday020115+min" appears to be a specific product code or identifier, and it could refer to a few different things: A specific electronics or hardware component. A video file or digital media reference.
Could you let me know what kind of item this is or where you saw the code? That will help me find the right information for you.
For search engineers:
For users:
| Content Categories | Stage Mode | Composer Mode for Characters |
Composer Mode for Props |
|---|---|---|---|
| Project | ✔ | ||
| Actor | ✔ | ✔ | |
| Head | ✔ | ||
| Body | ✔ | ||
| Accessory | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
| Animation | ✔ | ||
| Scene | ✔ | ||
| Props | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
| Media | ✔ |