Saturday, November 22, 2008

Double Your iPhone Battery

Richard Harrington | 11/22- 08:51 PM

Long days in the field… phone keeps going

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I know some of you hate iPhone posts (sorry)....

But here’s something I just had to gush about…. The mophie Juice Pack iPhone battery is shipping. I had the original battery pack, but with the new form-factor for the 3G phones, I had to upgrade. Here’s the specs:
  * Standby Time – Up to 350 hours
  * Talk Time – 6 additional hours on 3G | 12 hours on 2G
  * Internet Use – 6 additional hours on 3G | 7 hours on Wi-Fi
  * Audio Playback – 28 additional hours
  * Video Playback – 8 additional hours

This device is absolutely awesome and lets me get through a long day of business.

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

AppleTV, WDTV, or Blu-ray: Which one is best to distribute your HD project?

Allan Tépper | 11/20- 11:18 PM

Even if your HD project isn’t destined to be shown over the air, you’ll still want your client be able to play it on an HDTV set

image

Even if your HD project isn’t destined to be broadcast over the air, you’ll still want to have your client be able to play it on an HDTV set, not just on a computer. The good news is that you have several options to make that happen, including Blu-ray, AppleTV, and the brand-new WDTV device from Western Digital. During this transitional period, it is often the producer who influences the client as to which HD player to acquire. Many producers even incorporate the cost of one of these HD players in the project price and then give the device to the client “as a gift” with the first HD project, if the client doesn’t already own any HD player. It’s great to have options, but you must understand them fully (both their strengths and weaknesses) in order to pick one, two of them, or all of them, depending upon the exact format of HD you have produced, the hardware you own (or are willing to buy), the type of client, and the type of delivery. This article will help you learn the details that will help you make the appropriate decision.

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Why Pro Res Should Be Your Only Res & The AJA IoHD Part 1

Kevin P. McAuliffe | 11/20- 11:24 AM

Unboxing the AJA IoHD, and setting up

I thought that for this next article series, I would take a look at Apple’s biggest addition to Final Cut Studio 2, and that is the inclusion of their newest QuickTime codec, Pro Res 422 (and Pro Res HQ).  Most editors might think “Big deal, I can already edit in HD, so why would I use Pro Res?”.  Well, I’ll tell you why.  First of all, you get real-time HD capture across HD-SDI at 8 or 10-bit.  You also get HD frame sizes at SD file sizes (in all major HD formats), you get a codec that gives you quality that is almost as good as codecs that you are currently using to edit HD with, and the best part is that you can edit in Pro Res 422 and Pro Res 422 HQ in the comfort of your own home on FireWire hard drives.  Oh, and did I mention that because it’s “Pro Res 422”, you are working in a true 4:2:2 color space?  Until Final Cut Studio 2, Avid has thrown in our faces the fact that they have great quality, compressed HD for their editors to work with, and Final Cut editors don’t.  Well, not anymore.  The big advantage we have over Avid editors right now is choice.  We can choose the hardware we want to use as our input/output device, and Avid editors really don’t have the choice.  So that brings up a very interesting question.  How do you actually get Pro Res into your system and edit with it?  High end post production houses use MacPros that you can install HD capture cards into for all your editing needs, but what about the rest of us?  Now I know that some editors might think that editors who don’t use high end MacPros aren’t professional, and are only working on corporate and wedding videos, which is completely untrue.  I am currently working on thirty webisodes of a show that I am editing in Pro Res that will be shown exclusively on the web, as opposed to on television.  Let’s take a look at how professional editors can edit anywhere with AJA’s IoHD and Apple’s Pro Res 422.

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

AppleTV, WDTV, or Blu-ray: Which one is best to distribute your HD project?

Allan Tépper | 11/20- 11:28 AM

Even if your HD project isn’t destined to be shown over the air, you’ll still want your client be able to play it on an HDTV set

image

Even if your HD project isn’t destined to be broadcast over the air, you’ll still want to have your client be able to play it on an HDTV set, not just on a computer. The good news is that you have several options to make that happen, including Blu-ray, AppleTV, and the brand-new WDTV device from Western Digital. During this transitional period, it is often the producer who influences the client as to which HD player to acquire. Many producers even incorporate the cost of one of these HD players in the project price and then give the device to the client “as a gift” with the first HD project, if the client doesn’t already own any HD player. It’s great to have options, but you must understand them fully (both their strengths and weaknesses) in order to pick one, two of them, or all of them, depending upon the exact format of HD you have produced, the hardware you own (or are willing to buy), the type of client, and the type of delivery. This article will help you learn the details that will help you make the appropriate decision.

The rest of this article has been moved to Allan’s PVC channel. Click here to view it.

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Monday, November 17, 2008

RED ONE: Obsolete Already?

Adam Wilt | 11/17- 01:54 AM

Where does the current RED hubbub leave the RED ONE?

An R1 yesterday. It doesn’t look too worried.

With last Thursday’s epic announcement (pun intended) from RED, the other shoe has fallen.

Four years ago at DV Expo 2004, a couple of folks working on what was then simply called the “Oakley Special Project” took me aside to discuss a top-secret operation, launched in a remote mountain stronghold in southern California. Eccentric millionaire playboy Jim Jannard (it seems like most modern superheroes have that as a lifestyle description), a camera fancier with something like 1,500 cameras in his personal collection, had decided to build the One Camera to Rule Them All… only it wasn’t one camera.

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Thursday, November 13, 2008

Here is RED Scarlet / Epic

Scott Gentry | 11/13- 11:15 AM

As a follow up to Mike’s spec post…

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Monday, November 10, 2008

Review: Hood-Pro Sock-loupe

Adam Wilt | 11/10- 08:54 PM

$80 turns your PMW-EX1’s LCD into a big, beautiful viewfinder.

The Hood-Pro Sock-loupe turns the EX1’s LCD into an EVF.

Lots of people have said, “if only there were a viewfinder lens I could mount on the PMW-EX1‘s LCD, I’d be happy.” Palm Desert shooter Mike Stevens not only said it, he did it: his Hood-Pro hood is a strap-on LCD hood, and the Sock-loupe is, well, a sock with a +7 diopter loupe sewn into the toe. Pull the sock over the hood, and hey presto! You’ve turned the LCD into an eye-level EVF, arguably better than the one on the EX3. The floppy sock squishes up against your face, whether or not you wear glasses, providing a good seal against extraneous light, while the two-element lens provides a close-up, detailed view of the LCD.

more »

Friday, October 31, 2008

Dymo DiscPainter Review

Matt Jeppsen | 10/31- 11:10 PM

Dymo’s svelte disc printer

By Matt Jeppsen
www.dymo.com
$250

The DiscPainter by Dymo is a dedicated printer for CD and DVD disc media. Bundled with cross-platform design software, it’s a solid solution for both Mac and PC users. I’ve been using a DiscPainter for a few months now, and here are my experiences using the unit for my own production work on a G5 PPC Mac.

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LIGHTING: Advanced Cucoloris Use Illustrated by a Solar Eclipse

Art Adams | 05/24- 11:24 AM

Q: What happens when you stack several pattern-making devices in front of a light? A: Extreme lighting goodness. Learn why here…

I love stacking cucolorii (plural of “cucoloris”) and I thought it was time to write an article about how this technique works and why I like it so much. I was a bit stretched for ideas that would illustrate this concept… and then an eclipse happened. Why that made a difference is a very interesting story…

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Compositing in FCP X

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