Monday, April 24, 2006

Super-sweet.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Sweet.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

And to think that some people say there’s no such thing as progress.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

If only this was an order of magnitude cheaper.

Monday, February 13, 2006

Well, I actually converted them back in November, but I only got a chance to test out ipod versions of my shorts last week. I threw a few of them online, and jazzed up the filmography page.

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Opened the old mac, installed ~450GB of my brother’s drives, moved another 200GB to the bottom of my dual enclosure. Throw in the existing 320GB drive there and my laptop’s 80GB, and…finally over 1TB of space!

Yes, I know you’re quite impressed.

Thursday, January 5, 2006

Well, the date has come and gone. About ten people have managed to get HVX200’s, and have been quietly posting footage and comparisons. The ones on the various wait lists are wailing and gnashing their teeth.

What I’ve seen has been pretty impressive so far. DVCPRO-HD is essentially 4 DV data streams together. The image quality is roughly the same, but they improved the color sampling so the end result looks much cleaner. The HDV GOP and blocking issues seem to be solved, my main reason for leaning against the FX1.

My little laptop handles 720@24p fine. 1080@24p seems to kill it, but it seems to be less a CPU issue and rather the max transfer rate of my 5400 rpm internal laptop drive. I’ve been holding out for Seagate’s 160GB drive, but maybe a 120GB 7200 rpm one would be a better choice. My brother gave me his old hard drives out of his machine, so I picked up another 600GB of disk space. I need to figure out how to consolidate everything, but it should put me over the terabyte mark.

Is this the year? We’ll see.

Wednesday, December 7, 2005

Footage.

Shipping December 29th. Importantly, the P2 prices dropped over half in price. I was all ready to make do with a 2GB card, and now 8GB costs the same amount. Woot. And the trend should only continue in the future. In a year or two, they’ll be giving away 128GB cards with cereal boxes.

My brother promised me another 450GB of space once he clears it off. Staples had 50 packs of DVD-R disks for $8. Bought a couple and decided to finally make proper backups of all my data. Then all I gotta do is make sure I’m keeping up to date going forward. The piece of tech that would be super-cool is a DVD autoloader combined with a jukebox.

Thursday, December 1, 2005

Scratch that previous bit about qmaster being easy to set up. Woke up to find all the renders had stalled, wasted a bunch of time getting the whole thing working again. Some notes:

  • Traffic appears to be routed through the box that submits the jobs, so the submission machine needs to be left on the network.
  • If you delete a controller, you have to reassign its slave nodes to the pool before creating a new one, else they will quietly (and invisibly) wait for the original to return.
  • Compressor stores locations as relative to its current location, i.e. if you submit your batch from the box that shares the network drive none of the other nodes will be able to find the files.
  • Each node needs a different serial, else you will get Quicktime Error: -50.
  • The simplest setup seems to be a controller that runs Compressor (submitting the jobs), linked to another box that maintains the network volume/is a slave node. From there you can add additional slave nodes that see the network volume.

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