Archive for April, 2006

Bitmobile and the Muscle Car

The bitmobile pulled up to the convention hall curb and I got my first limo meeting at NAB. Luxology showed me the new version of Modo, due out in a few weeks, and it was a convincing demo. I usually withhold judgement on products until I take them for a test drive or use them in production. But having seen the product over the past year and going on gut I believe Modo will become a very important 3D product. This is the Stuart Ferguson, Allen Hastings, and Brad Peebler follow up to their other product Lightwave, and a good case can be made for software developers that have the opportunity in their careers to create the same category of product twice.



Adobe Premiere honcho Randy Ubillos got to do this with Final Cut Pro, and Modo may be a similar situation. OK, Modo. It‘s was first a polygonal modeler and the latest version adds texture painting, mapping and rendering. It runs on Windows and natively on the Mac. The render, shown to me on the latest Mac laptop is very, very fast. Yes, I did not hammer it, but I asked the right questions and it looks very promising. No animation yet, which is a too bad, but this time next year we may be seeing the app that professionals begin to include in the fraternity of high end 3D apps. more

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Press Release: NewTek announces VT[5] Live!

Press Release:



Integrated production suite upgraded with SDI switching and HD editing more

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Press Release: da Vinci Names Master Colorists at NAB2006

Press Release:



da Vinci Names Master Colorists at NAB2006 Presentation Ceremony



At da Vinci’s Master Colorist Awards ceremony on April 25 at NAB2006, da Vinci announced winning entries in the four categories of its annual competition. This year’s winners are: more

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Attendance up slightly

The NAB is reporting attendance of 105,046 for this year’s show, slightly up from last year’s figure of 104,427.

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Welcome to L.A.

At the Autodesk booth a short while ago, I ran into David Cole, the award-winning supervising colorist on King Kong. David was at the booth to test out the new, custom-designed hardware panel for the Discreet Lustre digital color-grading system, which Autodesk is showing at NAB, and hopes to offer to the marketplace before the end of the year. He was also visiting Vegas fresh off his arrival in Los Angeles from Down Under, after taking a gig as senior DI colorist at Laser Pacific, Hollywood.



David is currently working on a couple of modest-budget features at Laser, but insists the time for that company to land a DI gig on, in my words, “a major, blowout, big-time, studio effects film,” is not far off for the facility known as a legendary video mastering house for TV. Making Laser Pacific a major DI player, David concedes, was a major reason he left his comfy life in New Zealand for Hollywood. more

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Chyron turns 40

The venerable Chyron is celebrating its 40th anniversary here at the show. The biggest announcement at NAB 2006 is Lyric PRO, a live graphics renderer that splits graphics into component parts (”persistent objects” within “scenes”). Senior VP and COO Kevin Prince showed me how these objects can be added, removed, and altered at any point during an animation, live, regardless what’s happening on the air. Based on InterFuse technology, Lyric Pro is available as an option for Chyron’s HyperX and LEX graphics platforms.



Prince also showed off HX200, a lower-cost HD/SD switchable turnkey graphics platform that fills in gaps in the product line. Channel Box is Chyron’s first channel branding product. Chyron heard complaints from broadcast stations that it’s unreasonably hard for their staffs to remember how to change channel branding content - it doesn’t happen very often, and staff turnover is such that often those with expertise have left the building once it’s time for a rebranding. Chyron claims that Channel Box’s GUI makes it super-simple to update content. more

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Per Michael’s JVC notes

Earlier today, Michael Goldman gave a good update on JVC’s plans, including that very interesting initiative with DuArt Labs. DuArt is really pretty unique anymore, as they still act with the hopes and aims of the Indie film/video community foremost in their business strategy.



I’m sure we’ll hear more intriguing details on that as the project evolves.



But I’m writing right now because I’ve heard JVC’s name come up a number of times as I’ve visited booths around the floor, especially from the once rather boring seeming companies that are providing the broadcast products that take your completed video efforts and transform them into something to broadcast or record.



JVC has come up in those booths by name because although the camcorder puts out a beautiful HD/HDV signal, in the end it’s an analog HD signal, something which doesn’t fit so easily into an increasingly all digital infrastructure. Well, the solution is to convert that signal to digital video, and it’s those companies providing the converters, signal processors and various interfaces that are talking about providing the solution–a box that’s a converter of analog video to digital. more

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Avocent at NAB

Avocent is an interesting company. They made their name in KVM (keyboard, video, mouse) switching for large enterprise clients - command and control centers and the like. From there it wasn’t too much of a “switch” to the broadcast world. After all, what facility wouldn’t want the power to grant access to any computer system (editing, graphics, etc.) from any suite? Flexibility is always nice.



The company also has an interesting line of products that are a bit peripheral to the broadcast industry. The Emerge WMS series are “wireless media streamer” products that send video images from source to display without messy wires.



At NAB, however, Avocent’s theme is “KVM switching for broadcast.” The company was touting its KVM switching support for Avid (Avocent is an Avid technology partner). At its many demo sites at the Las Vegas Convention Center, Avid is using Avocent switching to allow its presenters to use any keyboard, monitor, and mouse location to access any Avid system across a 16×64 matrix. New for the show is support for dual-head switching, which covers the many editors who need dual monitors. And within Avocent’s control software is integrated baseband audio/video switcher. Using an Nvision router at NAB, Avocent is showing how its KVM switching infrastructure can be tied directly to audio and video switching. If an editor switches workstations, the preview monitor switches AV as well with no latency.

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Broadcast Pix goes smaller



I met with Broadcast Pix president Ken Swanton this morning in the South Hall (listen to our podcast later tonight). Over the last three years the company has sold about 200 all-in-one broadcast-level production studios based around a hardware switcher and a Windows box. Broadcast Pix software makes it possible for one person to control still store, onscreen graphics, remote-control cameras, as well as the live switcher to produce programming for a wide variety of intended applications. These include educational video, corporate training, houses of worship, and even TV news for smaller-market network stations. Inputs can be analog (composite, component, S-Video) and/or SDI.



This year at NAB Broadcast Pix goes smaller-scale with a more affordable (under $10K) all-in-one system. The Broadcast Pix Slate 100 includes a video switcher, a character generator, camera control functionality, and clip, still, and logo stores like its bigger, older brother. Instead of having both SDI and analog I/O, however, customers need to choose one or the other. Unless they want both, in which case they can pay a bit more for the option.



Swanton told me a bit about the types of customers Broadcast Pix is attracting - major broadcasters, corporations, universities, and even a church in Africa round out the client list. Again, check for our podcast with Swanton later tonight…

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JVC’s Busy

JVC executives were a happy bunch at the company’s press luncheon today–promoting the latest steps in JVC’s PROHD strategy to bring “HD to the masses.” They touted the GYHD-200U HDV camcorder, bulked up for 60p acquisition; the GYHD-250U camcorder, with a studio conversion kit; the SA-HD50U HDV MPEG-2 encoder/decoder; and a 48-inch, 3-chip, DILA reference monitor capable of showing images at 1920×1080, called the DLA-HRM1.



But, personally, I was most struck by the company’s announcement of an initiative with DuArt Film Lab of New York. That initiative is called the Digital Den, and is essentially being designed as a resource center, based at DuArt and using JVC display technology, for independent filmmakers who are trying to design workflows and solve problems for their projects. more

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The editors of Digital Content Producer and millimeter post live from the NAB Show as the news happens. Check back several times a day for the latest industry news, reports from press conferences, and product introductions.

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