Sunday, September 07, 2008
Hoodman releases a new support unit for hand-held shooters
While at Photoshop World, I stopped by the Hoodman booth to check out new products. One in particular caught my eye. The WristShot Camcorder Support System takes the weight of the camera and transfers it to your forearm.
I tried a unit out and bought one… its a nice way to get stability and literally take a load off the wrist. The unit is designed to work with cameras up to 10 pounds. What’s also nice is that the unity includes a tripod adapter mount making it easy to switch from your standard tripod to the WristShot unit.
We did a video interview on the product and will have it up shortly. For now, check out the company’s website. The unit retails for $199.
Sunday, September 07, 2008
Learn how to make quick and accurate selections with channels.
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Homepage animation has some talking.
Visitors to the NAB 2009 website are greeted with an animation of a raised white flag… typically seen as a sign of surrender. This is sending the wrong message. The conference is going strong and continues to evolve. I’ve attended and spoken at the conference for the last five years. Despite some high profile drop-outs (like Avid and Apple) in 2008 the show still boasted more than 72,000 attendees. I found it as relevant as ever and enjoyed informative presentations, looked at great products, networked like crazy, and managed to have some fun in there too. I believe in NAB, last year I brought 5 employees with me.
more »
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Friday, August 15, 2008
Advanced Technique made easy… learn how to chromakey in Photoshop
Sunday, August 03, 2008
1. Look in the Autosave Vault. Before panicking, simply try going back a few versions. Do a search for Autosave in the Finder. Look in the folders for a backup of your project file. Work your way backward through the recently saved copies.
2. Create a new user account. Create a new user account for testing purposes. This is a great way to see if the problem is a corrupt preferences file. Most Final Cut Pro preferences files are stored in the user’s settings. Open the System Preferences panel under the blue Apple. Click Accounts. Click on New User. Create one call test, and give it admin privileges. You can assign it a password or not. Only use this account for troubleshooting (you may want to keep it for the future).
Now, log out, and log in as the new user. Try opening Final Cut Pro. It should open with no active project files. If it opens, you’ve narrowed the problem down to bad user preferences (see next tip) or a bad project file.
Saturday, August 02, 2008
Need to get your video delivered to your audience? Then there’s probably going to be some compression involved. Don’t let hardware or software get in your way. Let’s take a common sense approach to getting your video out there.
Pick Your Power
There are tons of compression tools out there, but the pro apps offer important features like batch processing, multiple architecture support, and customizable presets. The five most popular options are:
Apple Compressor (www.apple.com) Bundled free with Final Cut Pro or DVD Studio Pro. However it can’t output some Window’s oriented formats and it is occasionally cranky (requiring restarts, trashing preferences, and even re-installs to get back on track).
Canopus ProCoder (www.canopus.com) a versatile PC-only solution for encoding video in a variety of formats. It offers both a guided and an expert mode to setting up your jobs.
Autodesk Cleaner and Cleaner XL (www.discreet.com) The granddaddy of encoding utilities. It’s suffered from changing ownership several times and hasn’t seen much development lately.
Telestream Episode and Episode Pro (www.flip4mac.com) This product offers hooks into Apple Compressor and offers a variaety of additional formats that Mac users need.
Sorenson Squeeze (www.sorenson.com) An easy to use compression utility that also unlocks some specialty formats like Flash Video. Version 4.1 (a free upgrade) build in support for Windows Media files on the Mac Platform by using Flip4Mac (not a free upgrade - $99/$179).
Thursday, July 31, 2008
1.) De-interlace your video: Most video files are interlaced, which means that half of one image is blended with half of the next. On a Television this produces smoother motion, on a computer it produces junk.
2.) Lower your audio standards: Most users are listening to computer audio on tiny speakers. Cutting your sample rate to 22 or 11 kHz and the sample size to 8-bit will often produce unnoticeable audio changes but huge space saving.
3.) Shrink the window: While you don’t need to make video postage stamps sized. But reducing the window to half size creates a file that is 25% the file size of the original. That’s a BIG savings in space.
4.) Reshape the video: Most likely you are working with a video file that is sized 720 X 480 (or 486) pixels. You need to resize this to 640 X 480 for it to properly display on the computer monitor.
5.) Restore the washed-out picture: Video signals operate between an RGB value of 16 thru 235. Computers use an RGB value of 0 thru 255. You will need to restore the back and white point of your image. Many applications have this option.
6.) Improve the saturation: A video file displayed on a computer will also need the saturation turned up a bit. This is to compensate for what I call the Wal-Mart effect. Consumer TVs have their reds over-cranked to make skin tones appear richer on their cheap tubes.
7.) Frame Rate: Your video file is likely recorded at approximately 30 fps. This is needed for a television display, but not important for most web video. Reducing your frame rate to 15 or even 10 fps will result in a 50 - 66% savings in file size.
8.) Codecs: The file architecture you pick will often have its own codec chosen. However some file formats support a variety of codecs. Be sure to keep compatibility and audience requirements in mind. Newer codecs offer a significant advantage over older formats.
9.) Don’t use a Conduit: For faster compression, don’t run web compression through a conduit like Final Cut Pro to your compression utility. Instead, save a flattened, self-contained movie and then compress.
10.) Test it: Before you compress a lot of video, create a small test file. Try compressing 10 seconds of video with different settings. Find the ones that work best for you.
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