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Showing posts from February, 2009

Broadcast Expo 2009. I was there too.

The show was fascinating as well as a real boy's toy fest. I met and had a great talk with Bob Monaghan . He's a programmer from California and is writing control software for Vision Research's Phantom camera. You know, the one which does 1000 frames per sec at full HD. Well now there's the V12.1 and it starts at 6242 fps at 1280x800 and Bob takes it to his granny's ranch at weekends and films while shooting things up with his Winchester. Bob is the only programmer I know who claims bullets as a legitimate software testing expense. Apparently he can't wait to be audited. We got several more interviewees signed up for the regular web delivered TV show we are developing with TV-Bay . Sony, Cirrolite and DivX are amongst those already in the can and we are saving up Hovvercam for the spring when we can combine their interview with an air drop test of kit cases. I am looking forward to the Phantom interview especially since we could get to shoot it on one but onl

Improving the wrong process

I suppose that the continuing media attention to the world's financial problems is getting to be a little tiresome. The favourite game of pinning the tail of blame onto a new donkey continues apace so even though very impressed by the man I wasn't expecting much from Andrew Marr's interview with Lord Turner this morning . But I was agreeably surprised by an observation that could apply generically to a lot of business. Andrew Marr was getting Lord Turner to respond to the accusation that the FSA had failed to keep banking on the rails. I thought LT's response was really interesting: " With hindsight, the FSA, like other authorities throughout the world, was focused too much on individual institutions and the processes and procedures within them and not adequately focused on the totality of the systemic risks across the whole system and whether there were entire business models, entire ways of operating which were risky. " And he's quite right. We do

XDCAM is easy as SDHC for Sony EX-1&3

To be truthful I've not bought an XDCAM camera yet. But having Rob chasing around the world on the Volvo Race editing XDCAM footage in all the stopovers means I hear about it all the while. So I thought that I'd look into workflow before I actually buy a camera. Both Sony's EX1 and EX3 are high performing cameras and the only reservations I have heard is that they create a bit of an issue when you have only a very few memory cards (they are expensive) and are trying to manage safe data handling. The cheapest workflow has been to put the SxS card into say a MacBook Pro's SxS slot and copy the data to a hard drive. Now there's nothing wrong with that but if you only have a few cards then you have to keep doing the transfers. But now there is a neat solution from Australia. E-Films in Australia's New South Wales have a US$35 SxS card into which you can put an £38 16Gb SDHC card. This means you can have a couple of their MxR Expresscard Readers in your EX1

Wealth Workout - A Fraser Hay Seminar

Last year we shot a few short films for Fraser Hay and this was one. It was first uploaded to YouTube and was then embedded as required into Fraser's websites. The quality of YouTube video is more than compensated for by its diasporal effect on the search engines. The quality of Vimeo makes viewing a more pleasant experience. So do we use YouTube as a preview/trailing facility and then rely on the high quality sites for distribution? Or should the video be uploaded to everywhere for virulence? Fraser Hay - Wealth Workout from i-catching movies on Vimeo .

Breaking the Business

This is a very short film we shot and edited as a promo for a local writer. It was the first non-doc piece of work that I've been involved in for a long time. It's been on YouTube for a while but I thought it would be nice to have it on Vimeo in better quality. Breaking The Business from i-catching movies on Vimeo .

A short film about Christmas Cards

A short while ago Phil, our cameraman, had been out on a shoot. It was for a film about making Christmas Cards as a way of raisng money for charity. The three residents of a Leonard Cheshire Home featured in the film are some of the artists whose artwork is on sale. Phil wanted to give them a short film just about them so we recut the rushes and here it is. Charity Christmas Card Artists from i-catching movies on Vimeo

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