| Preview
of what to see at NAB |
April 2005
NAB Preview
2005
What to see,
where to go, how to survive
by Philip Hodgetts
NAB 2005 shows every sign of being,
once again, in the boom years. Every indication from accommodation
bookings to event attendance suggests that this will be the year
that NAB comes back from the doldrums. People are ready to talk
business and spend money again.
It's almost like 1999, except that underpinning
every deal will need to be a solid value proposition and sound
business sense.
One area that is very much like 1999 - the year DV started to
be noticed with the VX1000 from Sony and Apple's Final Cut Pro
version 1 - is the advent of HDV, and some HDV competitors. This
will certainly be the year of affordable HD. If not HDV from
Sony, perhaps something "ProHD" from JVC or nearly
HDV but on P2 media from Panasonic. There will be an HD solution
for every budget, and editing solutions to follow.
For the last several years, NAB has been
billed as "The Convergence Marketplace" and it finally
seems like there is, perhaps, enough interest in technologies
proven five years ago (and abandoned for lack of success) to
come back from the cold.
Whatever gets announced at Apple's user
extravaganza on Sunday morning, Adobe and Avid's more restrained
media events later in the day, or in among the ticker-tape-parade-like
waterfall of announcements on Monday morning, DV Guys will be
there to keep you up to date and informed, through the Pro Apps
Hub news, my blog and live from the show floor every day with
the movers and shakers bringing you the buzz of the show.
Post
I think we can safely assume
that this will be a very big year for post production and effects
software. While all the attention is often on Apple who are masters
at orchestrating the "big event' and building buzz, it's
unlikely that Adobe and Avid will leave it to the big Apple.
With Pinnacle likely to become a division of Avid and is not
expected to have any dramatic announcements in the Post Production
arena.
Adobe
Having recently released version
2 of its Creative Suite - Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, GoLive,
Acrobat and associate applications - Adobe could be ready to
bring new versions of its video applications to market.
Premiere Pro
In fact, it's quite reasonable
to expect that Adobe will be talking about, or showing, Premiere
Pro 2. Premiere Pro is on a strong maturity path and with the
success of Dust to Glory edited on Premiere Pro, the timing would
be good to announce a new version, if it's ready. A new version
of Premiere Pro is highly likely.
After Effects
Even with competition from Apple's
Motion and Discreet's Combustion, Adobe's After Effects remains
the strongest application in the Motion Graphics arena. Rumors
have been "out there" that a new version - presumably
version 7 - but whether or not it's announced at NAB or later
in the year is very uncertain. Adobe have announced new versions
of After Effects at NAB in the past, so it's entirely likely
that a new version is coming.
Given the complete feature set already
in After Effects it's hard to know what will be added: possibly
direct capture and output.
Other highly sought after features is
an improved curves function for defining parameter changes, something
the rumor mills are predicting for After Effects. Other reports
from the rumor mill (which should always be treated with suspicion)
suggest a revamped user interface, support for Photoshop Layer
Styles, improved Slow Motion feature (perhaps using a vector
interpolation rather than frame blending); improvements to Input
and Output performance and the ability to manipulate text characters
in 3D space.
The Probability of a new version of After Effects is at best
around 50/50 at NAB 100% by the end of the year. Either way it
will likely be a full video suite update - Premiere Pro, After
Effects, Adobe Encore and Audition.
New Apps
As with Apple, Adobe lack an
easy-to-use 3D application in their suite. Although their Sunday
night even is focused on HD, a 3D application isn't impossible.
In fact some sort of 3D application is probably going to have
to be added to Adobe's line-up at some point to make it complete,
although integration between After Effects and Cinema 4D is very
tight. Perhaps Adobe's solution to 3D will be to beef up the
3D within After Effects.
During the DV Guys/Inside Mac Radio live
shows from NAB we'll be talking with Senior Product Manager at
Adobe, Steve Kilisky to kick off Tuesday's show 2pm .
Apple
Every rumor mill is working overtime
on Apple this year - little light on specifics but a lot of "it's
going to be a great year for Apple".
Of course, we're almost certainly going
to see new versions of Final Cut Pro, DVD Studio Pro, Motion
and Shake. What might we see in those new versions? Will there
be new applications as the rumor sites are suggesting, and if
so what gaps are there in the Pro Apps to fill?
Final Cut Pro
It's a fairly safe bet that Apple
will at least announce a new version of Final Cut Pro at NAB.
We know for sure that it will have "native" HDV support
as that was announced back at IBC and apparently has been previewed.
There will probably be enhanced HD support - perhaps live transcode
of HDV to DVCPRO 100 for editing. (Or is that my own wishful
thinking?)
What else will be new is purely guesswork,
and maybe a little wishful thinking :). Since Multicam has been
at the top of the Feature Request list for years, and that there
was an obscure reference to it in the Final Cut Pro 4 manual
(exporting Multicam button groups, from memory) it seems that
is' high on Apple's priority list as well. So, if they can make
it work to their satisfaction, I'm sure we'll see it in Final
Cut Pro 5 (or whatever the next version is called). I am equally
convinced Apple will not release Multicam inside Final Cut Pro
until they performance is up to expectation - at least as good
as Avid Adrenaline.
Multichannel audio input is probably,
given that the limitation imposed on QuickTime by use of the
Sound Manager API has been lifted with QuickTime 7 on Tiger,
which uses the CoreAudio API for sound. QuickTime gets multichannel
audio input by changing API, so therefore it becomes possible
for Final Cut Pro to inherit the feature. Almost a given for
multi-channel audio input. This will require a 3rd party sound
card or capture card, but already there are many offerings from
AJA and Blackmagic that have the capability waiting for Final
Cut Pro to turn it on.
Based on other changes in OS X 10.4 Tiger,
there could be changes in Final Cut Pro.
Q-Master/X-grid distributed rendering
could, in theory, be integrated into Final Cut Pro. There's a
big difference between theoretical integration and practical
implementation and from the little known about the Final Cut
Pro code, integrating distributed rendering would be non-trivial.
It would also only really effect rendering performance, not real-time
performance so it's entirely likely that the focus has gone to
enhanced real-time instead of something that would only be used
a relatively small portion of the time.
Much better would be to enhance the real-time
performance for the things that editors do. One way they could
have achieved that would be to change the effects architecture
so that it used the new CoreVideo API wherever possible. CoreVideo
puts the processing "heavy lifting" on the graphics
card through a standardized set of programming interfaces. One
source said that part of the reason that Cinewave had been dropped
was because it "would not work with Final Cut Pro 5".
If that's accurate then it does add weight to the suggestion
that Final Cut Pro 5 has been redesigned to use CoreVideo APIs.
It might also mean that DV Guy Philip
gets what he wants added - real time composite modes! Another
highly desirable addition to Final Cut Pro would be the ability
to mix codecs and image sizes in a Timeline without hardware.
It's been possible to do that with Cinewave on Final Cut Pro
4/HD but not without that hardware assist, and yet many other
software-only NLEs manage it now - for example Sony Vegas.
If Apple take any of these routes a kick-ass
graphics card will really benefit Final Cut Pro as much as it
does Motion now.
On a far more speculative and non-glamorous
level, some form of project sharing, perhaps in conjunction with
Xsan or an asset management tool, would certainly give Final
Cut Pro a boost in the high end of the industry. While that's
not a huge segment of Apple's market for the application it's
an important one because it is high profile.
DVD Studio Pro
Not being a DVD Authoring mavern,
I'm not sure I know what even needs to be added to DVD Studio
Pro to guess at what might be in a future release.
What would be good to have is some means
of video output monitoring from the Simulator inside DVD Studio
pro.
Another reasonable expectation is to
have some form of the animated templates like those introduced
with iDVD 5, but with more flexibility.
Shake
Once again, it's hard to determine
what might be added to an application I'm not using regularly,
but there has been some mutterings that 2.5 D for the stage might
be coming. That is, flat planes in 3D space similar to what Adobe
After Effects has.
Logic
Since Apple are already taking
orders for Logic Pro 7.1 and Logic Express 7.1 on their website
for delivery in a few weeks, a new version of Logic is unlikely.
Motion
Motion 1.0 revealed at last year's
NAB meeting is highly likely to get an update to at least a 1.5
revision. Performance tweaks are likely but as Motion is dependent
on Graphics card, CPU, memory and bus speeds, hardware improvements
will have more influence on speed perceptions in Motion than
code tweaking.
Motion and a future version of Final
Cut Pro will likely benefit greatly from a change to PCI-Express
architecture in PowerMacs. All applications would benefit from
dual processors based on dual core processors, but despite wild
speculation on some rumor sites, new PowerMacs are not expected
to be announced at NAB - it would break the pattern.
Even if Motion only gets bumped to 1.5
it will benefit from the code maturity a year's user experience
brings and from the integration of features that were planned
but no doubt dropped in order to make a shipping release - such
is the way with all version 1 applications
It's been said that even at version
3, Final Cut Pro had features from their original planning at
Macromedia not yet implemented.
New Applications
There are rumor sites that speculate and indulge based on supposed
inside information on the code names for projects. As that's
bordering on breaking California's Trade Secrets laws, we'll
keep right away from that and speculate based on public knowledge
and extrapolation. This is entirely for your enjoyment and indulgence
although if it proves to be in any way accurate I'll claim that
it was because of brilliant insight!
As I see it, there are four areas where
Apple could make additions to the Pro Apps lineup to make it
a more complete suite of tools: Image Processing with paint and
draw; 3D; Asset Management and Audio Post.
Image Processing
CoreImage lends itself to providing
Pro Apps users with an alternative to Adobe's Image Ready that
is tightly integrated with the video applications and optimized
for screen work. I very specifically note Image Ready not Photoshop
- Photoshop is for print work while an Image Ready alterative
would work entirely in RGB (or YUV?) video color. If Apple decided
to create an application themselves, based on CoreImage it would
be more likely to focus on ease of use and temploratization for
the functions used in post production rather than a huge, print-oriented
application like Photoshop.
But for someone like myself who uses
a fraction of Photoshop's power, it would be attractive to have
an option that's even more tightly integrated than Photoshop
- perhaps with the ability to start a "paint" document
from within Final Cut Pro?
An image processing application would
be a great showcase for the CoreImage API - Heck Phil Schiller
demonstrated a rudimentary version with filters as a technology
preview at the WWDC last June.
3D
A "3D Application for the
rest of us" (to borrow Avid's description of Avid 3D) is
probably an essential addition to Apple's pro line up. Although
Apple actively promote Maya and frequently include it in roadshow
presentations with Shake, Maya's complexity rules it out for
all but serious 3D users.
Avid got Avid 3D very right, in terms
of what editors and motion graphic designers need, and with the
improvements in OS X's support for OpenGL combined with Apple's
undoubted prowess in making the "easy to use" application
that meets the needs of that big middle hump in the bell curve
of user needs. It won't be powerful enough to challenge Maya,
or relatively limited like the excellent ProAnimator. Apple's
3D application, if they do one, will be simple to use - with
lots of prepackaged effects and scenes for a quick payback for
little effort.
Asset Management
Another need Apple has to make
Final Cut Pro and the other Pro Apps a better fit in studios
and high end facilities is some form of asset management, particularly
since Avid are pushing their Alienbrain acquisition to the forefront
and the recent release of Toxik from Autodesk.
One little mystery is the disappearance
of "s-a-l-t" - a UK company who had an asset management
tool used with Shake (and still linked from the Shake page at
Apple.com). The site itself has disappeared to be replaced by
a mysterious "S-a-l-t" has been purchased and is no
longer available" type message.
There is nothing to suggest that it's
Apple that purchased them, but if they did, then some time -
this year or next - asset management might be in Apple's future.
It would most certainly be welcome by those handling huge projects
and workflows on Xsan and Final Cut Pro.
Audio Sweetening/Post Production
While Apple officially don't
position Logic as an audio post production application, there
are some who feel confident using it that way. However, most
people feel that it really is configured more as a music creation
and scoring-to-video application, which is where it has been
traditionally very strong.
I'd like to see Apple take the core technologies
used in Logic and optimize the interface and functions for audio
post in the hope of drawing more users from Pro Tools into the
Appel Pro Apps world.
Avid
Avid won't be left behind in
the NAB announcements sweepstakes. While the speculation, and
rumor, swirls around Apple, Avid manages to keep their powder
dry for NAB announcement.
Expect a strong focus on asset and metadata
management, an area where Avid is very strong.
If you're keenly interested in metadata,
Avid and the American Society of Cinematographers are holding
a meeting at the Alexis
Park Hotel on Saturday April 16.
Avid's Alienbrain acquisition will be,
I think, a strong part of Avid's story this NAB. Avid is very
strong and currently unchallenged in the facility arena: project
management (and collaborative project workflows - sharing a project)
along with asset management and strong metadata and metadata-rich
MXF media.
In other applications we might see the
Adrenaline Media Composer software tied in with the HD Nitris
DNA for an "HD Symphony" - although may be more wishful
thinking on the part of some Avid customers than real expectation.
What is likely is a revision of the Xpress
Studio of tools with upgrades announced to some of the programs
in the suite. New versions of Xpress Pro, Avid 3D, and Avid DVD
authoring are likely - particularly in the DVD Authoring application
which is the least developed of the Studio applications.
You can get the full lowdown on Avid's
NAB releases on the DV Guys/Inside Mac Radio live broadcasts
from NAB. Tim Wilson, Senior Product Manager at Avid will be
joining use either Monday or Tuesday.
Sony Vegas
Sony were the surprise purchaser
of Profound Effects' Useful Things. Useful Things is a Python
interpreter for (previously) Adobe After Effects that let users
build complex effects from simpler building blocks, or to write
their own scripts.
Sony already have strong scripting support
in Vegas, which has been well used by 3rd parties to extend the
capabilities of the application. With already strong support
among users, perhaps Sony have a new version coming that will
integrate features from Useful Things. Vegas does not seem to
use the After Effects API natively so some integration work would
be required. The lead time between the announcement of the purchase
and NAB doesn't seem to be enough but the work could have been
started long before a purchase announcement.
Regardless of what happens with the Useful
Things purchase, Sony are very likely to release an update to
Vegas and DVD Production suite at NAB - they have each NAB for
the last couple of years.
Multiple projects per instance of the
application (without having to run multiple copies) would be
welcome, as would HD ingest and output other than HDV, which
is already supported. Sony have been testing Blackmagic DeckLink
cards for some time but so far it hasn't lead to a released product.
NLE Hardware
AJA
You have to have empathy for Ted Schilowitz, AJA's Product Manager,
Desktop Video Engines. Ted is doing his dealer demonstration
an hour before Apple's own product launch. Since much of what
he'll be announcing will be dependent on, or complementary to,
announcements Apple will not yet have made he'll be showing Keynote
slides with mostly blacked-out product!
As with Blackmagic I can't imagine what
more can be done, for every decreasing amounts of money, but
I think we can reasonably expect some great new products from
AJA ready to enhance whatever Apple releases an hour later on
Sunday.
As well as broadcasting all week from
the AJA stand, DV Guys will be talking with Ted Schilowitz at
3pm on Tuesday's show - yes we'll go overtime Tuesday just to
keep you well informed.
Blackmagic
Blackmagic Design may not be
as tight with Apple as AJA but they have released some very innovative
products over the last couple of years, beyond just the simple
Input/Output cards. VideoHub, HDLink Multibridge in particular
are pushing the performance of the digital studio up and the
cost down.
Blackmagic's Grant Petty has already
told DV Guy Philip that they will have new announcements for
NAB but we'll have to wait for the details.
Grant will be live from the Show floor
on the DV Guys/Inside Mac Radio show when the Aussie accents
will overpower the American!
Convergent Design
HDV-Connect is a sand-alone box
that allows ingest of HDV over FireWire material through HD-SDI
converting from HDV to HD-SDI in the box. This removes the need
to spend tremendous processor time converting the HDV CODEC to
an intermediate editing CODEC. HDV-Connect decompresses the HDV
video and audio on the fly as well as up-scaling to standard
HD-SDI (1080i or 720p). The HDV-Connect also allows RS-422 to
1394 control so you can control the camera/deck remotely.
HDV-Connect also features DVI, component,
and AES/EBU output for professional monitoring and LTC output
for time code transfer. There is also a HD-SDI input to allow
monitoring through component and DVI.
HDV-Connect also has a built in DV CODEC
to allow ingest from a DV deck. Also, it can act as a SDI capture
device for a PC/MAC with either DV over firewire or uncompressed
over firewire.
Compatible with Premiere, Xpress Pro,
Final Cut Pro, Liquid Edition, Vegas, News Edit
Convergent Design at NAB Booth # SL4032
Acquisition
There will be a tremendous amount
of interest this NAB in the acquisition side - particularly affordable
HD - both HDV and beyond. JVC and Panasonic have revealed new
low cost HD products, Sony have indicated that an HD version
of XD-CAM will be shown (although not necessarily as affordable
as JVC and Panasonic's products)
JVC - PROHD
JVC have a confusing marketing
strategy for a great product lineup. Branded under the "PROHD"
banner are two very different formats. At NAB they will be showing
the very professional GY-HD100U with recording completely within
the standard HDV specifications. They will also be showing a
PROHD XE product that uses a JVC-only recording format at higher
data rates and data density. By way of comparision this is like
DVCRO50 is to regular DV25 - double data rate with more color
information and lower compression.
GY-HD100U Camcorder
A professional HDV camcorder
weighing in at around 5 lbs with a heavy duty magnesium body
and balanced shoulder mount. The camcorder features 3 x 1/3"
1.1 Mpixel CCDs, which is more than enough for 720P without pixel
shifting. Interchangeable 1/3" lenses are supported with
JVC offering 16x and 13x Fuji lenses as standard options.
The GY-HD100U supports 720 24P, 720 30P,
480i and 480P with 1080i playback. It records to dual media -
MiniDV or hard drive (tape appears to be an option). Other features
include Memory stick, camera prices, Image control, including
Cinema Gamma, and Motion smoothing filter. It includes a flip-out
LCD and monochrome viewfinder with enhanced focus support.
Audio input is via dual XLR and outputs
are component, composite and FireWire. FireWire input is also
supported.
The camcorder records at the HDV 720
data rate of 19 Mbits/second. Like JVC's other 720 P HDV camcorders
it uses a 6 frame GOP instead of the 15 frame GOP of Sony's 1080
I camcorders.
The camcord supports true 24 P sampling
but places it within a 60 field structure, presumably similar
to the Panasonic DVX100 and similar camcorders.
Compared with the Sony Z1U this camera
supports 30P and 24P frame rates in HD at the 1280 x 720 resolution.
Although there are slightly fewer pixels in the horizontal (1280
x 1440 for the Z1U) and less in the vertical (1080 v 720) the
effective difference in resolution is small. Because the 1080
is interlaced, it effectively only resolves (after allowing for
Kell and interlace factors) slightly more than the HD100U.
However, because it only samples time
at 24 and 30P there is less temporal resolution in the 720P 30
format than 1080 30i (60 field). The HD100U is a true 24P camera
resolving much better detail than the Z1U at 24P because the
Z1U is a "fake" 24P.
A professional level camera in a more
robust body than the Z1U for a list price of "less than
US$10,000 with lens" - some say substantially less than
$10,000 because a European release had the price at "less
than 6,600 Euro which is around $8500 US, or roughly 3 times
the investment of a Sony Z1U. Shipping June 1, 2005. See it previewed
at NAB on JVC's stand C4526.
BR-HD50U Full and miniDV Deck with
integrated LCD
Along with the HD100U JVC will
be shipping the Br-HD50U in June 2005. This deck takes full and
miniDV tapes (DV and HDV format playback) with integrated LCD,
FireWire I/O and Component Output. More specifications and pricing
to come.
JVC PROHD XE - New HDV format
No pricing is currently available
but this would be the "professional" version of HDV.
A comparison would be DV25 to DVCPRO50 - where the DV25 formats
are a compromise on SD quality, DVCPRO50 is not. Likewise, with
a higher bit rate (expected to be double HDV standard) PRO HD
will not suffer the quality compromises of its lower bitrate
cousin.
No doubt this format will carry a higher
price tag, with the first camera coming with 3 x 2/3" CCD
that support full 1920 x 1080 resolution at 60P (even though
MEPG-2 itself, used for the recording format does not support
60P HD bitrates). The camera will support 720 (1280 x 720) at
24P, 30P and 60P and 1080 (1920 x 1080) at 30i (60 fields). This
XE format supports four audio channels (but it is not known if
there is compression or not).
Like the HD100U this camera will support
dual hard drive and DV Tape media.
Delivery date and pricing is not known.
JVC will be showing the PRO HD XE on their stand at NAB - C4526,
which is likely to be very crowded.
DV Guys and Inside Mac Radio will be
talking with JVC's Marketing Manager for the ProHD line, Dave
Walton at 2:45 pm on the Monday April 18 live webcast from the
show floor. Ask questions via the chat.
Panasonic
Panasonic are not part of the
HDV consortium so are taking a different approach with their
low-cost HD offerings, based around their P2 solid state media
format.
Panasonic AG-HVX200
Unveiling at NAB 2005, the AG-HVX200
is Pansonic's response to HDV. This small-form-factor hand-held
P2 camcorder provides 1080i and 720p recording to DVCPROHD (100
Mbits/sec) The AG-HVX200 records on a P2 card in 1080 in 60i,
30p and 24p; in720 in 60p, 30p and 24p; in 480 in 60i, 30p, and
24p either in DVCPRO50 and DVCPRO.
It has true 24P support, which will give
a longer record time per card, and is expected to have direct
FireWire out to record to a hard drive unit like the Focus Enhancements
FireStore - conveniently Focus Enhancements will be showing FireStore
HD at NAB on booths SL505 and SL4255E
The downside of the AB-HVX200 is that
it uses a fixed lens but the small form factor will find it a
niche market.
The small size and lack of moving parts
will open a niche for this camcorder, which will likely run US$20,000
for workable configuration of camera, cards and disk conversion.
Even if card prices drop dramatically, P2 is still vastly more
expensive and less convenient than almost everything else.
The FireWire option will take some of
the sting - just $450 for 41 minutes of record time. No archive
unless you want to keep it on the iPod.
Other camcorders
Panasonic are likely to have
a more professional camcorder - removable lens, larger form factor,
similar specification, to the AG-HVX200 previewed at NAB.
My rant on P2 media not quite there
yet.
Reasons why I can't get on board
with P2: it's expensive (very expensive). yes you can go to hard
drive instead of P2 media but now you've traded off every benefit
solid state has - portability, lack of magnetic interference,
no moving parts - and added weight and battery draing. You could
dump the P2 cards to drive periodically but that's a disruption
to production - "Sorry, Mr President, hold on a minute with
the announcement we're bombing Canada, I've got to clear my P2
media card" (OK, that's an exaggeration but it's not always
convenient to stop production for 4-5 minutes while you dump
to a hard drive).
And there's no backup. None. Nada, zip.
You either keep it on the hard drive (expensive) or you have
no backup. Not always important but I like to keep all media
because, except for hard drive and P2, the media is the cheapest
part of the whole production.
Ask the Panasonic folk about backup and
they suggest optical media. Well Sony have optical media source,
and it's lighter with lower power consumption than adding a hard
drive. The media is archive *or* recycle like tape. It's not
that much more than tape. Sony will have an HD XDCAM at NAB.
Solid state media may be viable some
time in the future. Maybe. I suspect by the time it is there
will be another alternative.
AJ-SD255
A professional level DVCPRO (25)
deck in a half-rack form factor that accepts full size and miniDV
tapes for ingest into an NLE and includes DVCAM playback.
Weighing in at 15 pounds, the deck has
three assignable function buttons.The deck has three BNC connectors
for composite, component, or Y/C I/O. Audio support includes
two-channel 48 kHz 16-bit digital audio I/O, one analog cue track,
and a separate monitor output. The AJ-SD255 will be available
in April 2005 for $5,500.
You'll find Panasonic in the Center Hall
at C3617.
Panasonic's Jan Crittendon will no doubt
help me understand the error of my ways when she talks with us
on the DV Guys/Inside Mac broadcast from the NAB show floor on
Thursday's show at 2 pm.
Reel Stream Andromeda
One booth that is bound to be
crowded all week is upstairs in the South Hall SU9969 - that's
where Reel Stream will be demonstrating their Andromeda hardware.
Andromeda, allows direct extraction of the uncompressed 4:4:4
data at 8, 10, or 12 bit direct from the camera head of standard
DV camcorders, like the AG-DVX100A. Andromeda can be retrofitted
to any camcorder at the Reel Stream facility.
The raw CCD data is intercepted before
decimation, color space reduction or compression and fed out
a USB 2.0 cable to computer or hard drive.
The raw footage is processed into popularly
used formats by Ree-stream's SculptorHD software, which also
provides a real time monitor system with more detail than available
in the camera's viewfinder. The output from SculptorHD can be
edited in any standard NLE in standard formats.
The results from Andromeda and Sculptor
HD are dramatically better than any other output from the same
camera and should be previewed at www.reel-stream.com
Reel Stream just revealed that the latest
version of their hardware/software package will output uncompressed
1280 x 720 P HD in raw format.
DV Guys and Inside Mac Radio will be
talking with the President of Reel Stream, Jeremy Jacobs at 2:15
on the Wednesday show.
Alongside 3DVX.2 stereoscopic imaging.
DV Guys interviewed Jason Goodman form 3DVX.2 on March 17. That
interview is still in the archives and the stand is well worth
checking out.
Sony
Sony have had a lot of great
press recently for their HDV-FX1 and HDR-Z1U HDV camcorders.
Some great background can be found in DV Guys HDV show on March
3rd, which is still in the archives.
At this NAB Sony are expected to reveal
an HD version of their Blu-ray disc-based XD-CAM. Disc based
cameras have the advantage of media that is as archivable as
tape or can be recycled and reused.
To make this work, it will be necessary
to increase the write speed of the blue ray recorder in the camera;
the most likely scenario will be to dual head drive mechanism
that Sony uses for its off-line transfer stations, which supports
faster than real time file transfers thanks to the higher I/O
rate. But a new HD compression format could also be in the cards.
There are no indications of pricing for
the HD XD-CAM but it's unlikely to be less than current XD-CAM
pricing.
Canon
While Canon is in the HDV consortium
they have not revealed any plans for a camcorder in that format,
although they have just recently dramatically dropped pricing,
via rebates, for XL-2 and GL-2 camcorders.
Either Canon are going to surprise us
with their brilliance and introduce a strong contender in the
HDV market, or they are biding their time for a later release.
Every indication is that they are biding their time for a later
release but who knows
Grass Valley
Formerly known as Thomson Broadcast
and Media Solutions Grass Valley are reportedly going to introduce
a new HD camcorder that won't be tape based. Most probably hard
disk based, it could possibly be flash memory competing with
Pansonic's P2.
Thomson Grass Valley can be found in
the Upper Level of the South Hall - SU7823A, SU7823, SU9067-MR,
where they'll also be showing two new HD studio cameras (LDK
4000 and LDK 400 ITW), new switchers and still stores.
Color Correction
Silicon Color
2K color correction on OS X Silicon color will be demonstration
their real-time FinalTouch2K and FinalTouch HD at NAB 2005 on
booth SL3665.
http://www.siliconcolor.com/
Color Finesse
Color Finesse previewed their
hardware color correction workstation - integrating with Final
Cut Pro via XML and with other applications as a stand alone
tool. For a fraction of the price, get control similar to expensive
hardware-based workstations.
Encoding
Popwire
Popwire will be showing Compression Master 3.1, Compression Engine
3.1 and their Windows Media Export (and import) component for
QuickTime.
The new features of Compression Master
3.1, to be highlighted at NAB are:
- -H.264 (AVC) video;
- 2-pass Flash video (presumably Flash
7, aka Spark);
- Windows Media MBR, and High Definition
support; and
- Full QuickTime integration for access
to all installed QuickTime codecs.
Popwire consider the H.264 a "preview
technology" - an initial release that will be improved upon
as H.264 becomes more mainstream and starts to become commonly
used by the end of this year.
-Popwire include a Windows Media Playback
component with the Windows Media Export Component so you can
play Windows Media content in the QuickTime Player. (A similar
playback component is expected from Flip4Mac, shortly but it
will be a commercial product.)
Popwire Technologies will be exhibiting
at NAB in booth SL3966.
Procoder
Stil the best overall encoding
solution if you can run a Windows box in your studio. SL325
Flip4Mac/Telestream
Telestream will be showing their
Flip4Mac Windows Media Exporter Component for QuickTime and should
be able to show their MXF import component for Final Cut Pro
and the Windows Media Import component for QuickTime which will
allow import of Windows Media files to Final Cut Pro and playback
of Windows Media in QuickTime Player.
Telestream will be exhibiting in the
Upper Level of the South Hall at SU11404
Storage
Apple Xsan
On the Apple stand - file level locking.
Facilis Technology Terrablock
Volume level SAN with direct connect
(no Fiber switch) for Final Cut Pro and Avid SL4446
EditShare
Network attached storage shared
access to media for post production at less than SAN pricing
- for Avid, Final Cut Pro and other NLEs SL3445
Atto
Will be previewing iSCSI technology
SL2265, SL1210R
Huge
Possibly showing SanStream 2
plus a range of storage options SL 2628
Medea
Wide range of SCSI and FireWire
storage options. SL3360
Promax
SATA configurations out the wazoo
- and also where you can purchase the Intelligent Assistance
training products at show special pricing. SL405
Studio Network Solutions
iSCSI SAN solution for OS X -
little known as it's being introduced at he show from the makers
of SANmp Fibre channel SAN. Also the Hard Drive toss SL3331
InPhase Holographic Drive Protype.
You'll have to find your way
to the Center Hall to get a preview of InPhase Technologies holographic
drive prototype on the maxell Corp Booth C8530. With storage
capacity of 300 GB up to 1.6 TB on a single 12cm/5" optical
disc. www.inphase-tech.com
Also - no NAB show booth but..
The Fujifilm
Holographic Versatile Disc technology which will someday
be able to store up to 3.9 terabytes of data on a single DVD
(or more than 200 times today's capacity).
Other Interesting things to look for
Plug-in Pavilion
Automatic Duck
Like holding out a cheesecake an hour
before a meal at a Fat Farm Automatic Duck are once again teasing
us with their upcoming NAB announcements The official announcements
will be made at NAB but they've announced what they will be announcing!
(Links will contain more information after the announcements.)
-Premiere Pro users will join the Duck
flock with the advent of Pro Export PPro to send edit information
out of Premiere Pro to Pro Tools with volume information intact.
The ability to export with volume information
is one of the features we now know will be in Pro Export FCP
3.0 - a major upgrade to the existing plug-in Export plug-in
for Final Cut Pro - the one that exports "Avid Compatible"
OMF files. Now Pro Export FCP 3 will export to Digital Audio
Workstations, including Pro Tools with volume and keyframe information
intact.
-Naturally Automatic Duck will be having
show specials, even if you're not able to make it to the show.
If you're at NAB head on down to the Plug-in Pavilion in the
Lower Level of the South Hall SL760.
Digital Anarchy
Digital Anarchy will be releasing
two new plug-in sets at NAB: EasyChart and Toon.
The centerpiece plug-in, EasyChart, provides
a graphical user interface and chart presets for animating the
data, simplifying the creation process and making it possible
for users to create a wide range of effects with minimal effort.
The other plug-ins each offer unique visualization options for
animating chart data, from Pie and Bar to 3D effects.
Toon!, is a filter for After Effects
and Final Cut Pro that gives video the look of a cartoon. Toon!'s
ability to intelligently analyze original footage and its manual
controls for solving problem areas make it an ideal tool for
giving video projects that frequently sought-after 'cartoon-look.'
Data Animator suite is currently priced
at USD $495; Toon is currently priced at USD $129. For more information
about the product and their release dates, please visit Digital
Anarchy's Web site at: www.digitalanarchy.com
Or stop by the Plugin Pavilion! Booth#
SL760!
copyright©2005philip hodgetts
DV Guy Philip Hodgetts is the President of Intelligent Assistance
and the co-creator of the Pro
Apps Hub. He's a regular contributor to
many websites and magazines, writes the news and tips of the
day and comments on the Present and Future of Post Production
Business and Technology in his Blog at www.intelligentassistance.com/blog.
|