You're joking right? It's a modelling tutorial for a street cop. @ -diesel- - What Vig said is important, the most useful thing you can learn is the skill of being able to distil and cross-reference info from many sources to get questions answered. Often one tutorial will only cover certain aspects and leave many questions…
http://google.com loads of tutorials there if you type in quotes. You already have 3d studio max installed. Go to Help on the menu bar, click tutorials. That will start you on the right track. Take notes I'd suggest. On with that. There is an AREA community that have random tutorials for 3d modelers who have peer to peer…
I used: F1. Max Main Menu > Help > Tutorials. Google. I really don't see a need for formal training unless you have money to burn, often the teachers are just as clueless as the students and just follow a tutorial they found or go right out of the help docs autodesk provides. I think the ability to find information distill…
I read books and tutorials. Then it's practice, practice, practice.... I had a lot of time to practice on my own while in school. :D This might help as well http://lounge.ego-farms.com/
It is weird because avast threw a massive hissy fit when I entered that site. Although it was probably the advertisements as I didn't get any such viruses and my pc didn't freeze and I was free to browse the tutorial.
Like people who are new to 3D art? I think it is very interesting, and I'm dying to learn. I would take some classes on the subject, but I don't know if I can fork the cash for them. Is there like some newbie section in the forums anywhere? I'd like to learn... My cousin gave me his computer and it had a copy of 3DS max on…