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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Filed under: CamerasEditingHardwareNAB 09

NAB 2009 - Monday Madness

Adam Wilt | 04/21

A sampling of tech demos and real products.


The AJA Ki Pro and a spare disk pack.

AJA dropped a minor bombshell with the Ki Pro. Start with the AJA IO HD, a FireWire800-connected, anything-in, anything-out, digital/analog connector box with built in downconverter and Apple ProRes 422 in hardware. Now shrink it down by a factor of four, and add on-board storage for recording and playing back clips. The Ki Pro ships with a 250 GB removable disk pack; additional 250 GB packs will be US$250.


The Ki Pro’s connector panel.

Like the IO HD, the Ki Pro has HD-SDI, component, composite, Y/C, and HDMI I/O, as well as an RS-422 machine-control port.


The Ki Pro also accepts ExpressCard34 memory sticks.

The box will also record on ExpressCard34 memory, though only using ProRes422, not ProRes422 HQ.



Use an iPhone or iPod Touch to wirelessly monitor and control the Ki Pro

You can plop the thing into a backpack, Slumdog-Millionaire-style, and control it wirelessly.

Price? US$3995. Shipping in a month or two. Sweet!


The GearNex lightweight gear head supporting a Ki Pro-equipped JVC.

GearNex (also seen here at the AJA booth) has developed a low-cost, lightweight gear head, suitable for prosumer camcorders and even lightly-loaded Reds.


The GearNex’s tilt mechanism.

It’s an honest-to-goodness gear head, perhaps not quite as smooth as some of the higher-end heads, but not bad at all. Both pan and tilt use nicely-weighted wheels with free-spinning handles, and both axes offer low-speed and high-speed gearing. It’ll pan 360 degrees, tilt down 45 degrees, and tilt up 45 degrees or until the back of your camera runs into the wheel, whichever comes first (the head is supposed to ship with a tilt wheel extender shaft, but I didn’t see it on the AJA booth). NAB show pricing is around $4000, and I think the post show pricing will be around $6000. As I recall, Silverado Systems has show pricing for pre-orders.


After hours, Adobe’s Simon Hayhurst showed a tech demo of a script-integration tool Adobe is working on. A script in standard format (created with Final Draft or the like) is parsed into XML, using the highly structured formatting of a film script to recover metadata: locations, actors, lines, and the like. Once read into a project database, the script data can be sent to Adobe OnLocation to create a pre-populated shot list, searchable and sortable on all the metadata derived from the script. Shipping? Some time in the future… maybe…

Premiere Pro 4.1, coming up soon, has access to all the metadata of an R3D file, letting you change color and gamma spaces, use or ignore embedded curves, change ISO ratings, color balances, and RGB gains and offsets.


Adobe’s Simon Hayhurst demos the R3D parameters dialog.

Adobe strongly suggests running CS4 with 16 Gigabytes of RAM to exploit the advantages of 64-bit code. “8 Gigs costs only $300, and if you’re trying to cut HD on a system with less than 16 gigs, you’re doing yourself a disservice.” Adobe also talked about Avid / Premiere Pro interchange, with basic AAF support already in the product and better support (including OMF) in upcoming updates.


There’s a lot more, but it’s past midnight and I’m running on 5 hours of sleep already and it’s only Monday (erm, was Monday; now Tuesday!). I’ll defer the rest of today’s goodies for a post-show wrap-up. Tomorrow is the Central Hall, with all the usual suspects: Panasonic, JVC, Canon, Sony, Arri, etc. Stay tuned…

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You must be registered to comment. This is an effort to reduce spam. Please REGISTER HERE.

“and if you’re trying to cut HD on a system with less than 16 gigs, you’re doing yourself a disservice.”

Urr okay. I guess everyone should throw out their G5’s and 06/07 Mac Pro’s then hmmm

Mind you, given how bloated Adobes products are it doesn’t surprise me that they recommend 16 gigs!

Posted by Simon Wyndham  on  04/23  at  03:04 PM


lightprism: yes, I saw the nanoFlash and Flash XDR, and I’ll discuss ‘em in my wrap-up article.

Simon: hey, I’m just reporting what Adobe said, grin. I lack the RAM capacity in any of my systems to either confirm or deny the veracity of that assertion, though I think it was aimed more at the Windows Vista crowd—and there, quite simply, I shall not go!

Posted by Adam Wilt  on  04/23  at  04:28 PM


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