Archive for January, 2007

Game Controllers + Hardware for Video Performance

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

psp

The recent NAMM conference highlighted a whole bunch of various new midi controllers. Create Digital Motion covered some of the best stuff for visualists, but to be honest there was nothing too revelatory. On the other hand – the Nintendo Wii has been making waves with it’s gestural and motion responsive controller. Naturally, this has been adapted for other creative uses. Watch to see a performer waving it around to create various effects and glitches. Moving right along, Pikix is a VJ software aimed to be used on the handheld video game console GP2X( plays games, mp3, divX etc ). Nifty. As is this PSP controlling a VJ system video which demonstrates a VJ using PSP + wifi to connect with a computer and use buttons to control camera position in 3D, the triggering of movies and change speed, direction and visual scratching!

Video and VJ Related Blogs

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

Added a few more to the daily browse :

www.artificialeyes.tv/reblog – mostly Vj related.

http://videothing.blogspot.com – hi-tech, vintage and quirky video equipment.

www.selfreliantfilm.comDIY tips.

http://del.icio.us/tag/vj – what other people are bookmarking as ‘vj’.

http://dvblog.org – an ‘oldie’ but worth mentioning for it’s continual supply of unusual clips.

http://motionographer.com – regular updates to showreels, links to various motion graphic movies, animations.

Throw some links in the comments if you’ve come across any good ones lately : )

Earning Money With Web Video

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

Large video storage sites are booming, which means at least some of them are making lots of money off the advertising being shown alongside user contributed videos. Not many of them however, are actually compensating users for their work. Scott Kirsner ( Cinematech Blog) has compiled a list of the video giants that do actually reward contributors ( ie no youtube on this list) : http://www.scottkirsner.com/webvid/gettingpaid.htm. ( He also has an excellent book – The Future of Web Video, self-published at Lulu. Review of that coming up shortly.

UPDATE : YouTube has announced plans to ‘share revenue with users’ in the coming months. ( Found via digg – with a few useful comments added )

UPDATE 2: Long, relevant interview with founder of blip.tv, discussing web payments for video creators ( via dvguru ).

January VJ Software overview

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

As spa-cinema yet again fails to become flavour of the month ( Australia is the driest continent in the world and gripped by water restrictions, what are you thinking? ), the world of VJ software continues it’s slow rise into public consciousness.

Software

VDMX 5 : Fresh from the vidvox.net stables, a new beta of their flagship software VDMX has arrived. Completely reworked and modular design which enables many different video applications to be built with it. Optimised for OS X and the newer mac Intel machines, it can blaze through DV-Pal resolution clips layering, blending and compositing on the fly. In the pipeline : a sequencer module and multi-screen outputs. VDMX 5 will also work very well with quartz composer files, the software built into OSX - meaning further fast, fluid capacities. The public beta includes five quartz compositions written by Roger Bolton ( Quartonian blog ) which demonstrate whats possible with VDMX beta 5 and Quartz. (free trial : http://www.vidvox.com/download/vdmx.php )

Modul8 2.5 – Seems to have one of the best mac multi-output functions at the moment, meaning it can easily isolate parts of movies and send these to multiple screens at once. Allows recording of your actions, for later rendering as movies, includes new FX, an integrated global mask system and anti-aliasing ( thanks to further harnessing of graphics cards rather than CPU ).

MXwendler – new mac beta version for their “100% hardware accelerated VJing and Realtime Compositing Application”, featuring ‘an internal superfast Video Feedback, rewritten interface and much faster live video.

Livid Union 2.1 – New mac update with high resolution recording, universal binary, new effects, + more.

Arkaos – 3.6 MIDI or 3.6 DMX ( which allows integration with lighting desks @ large venues & theatres ).

Resolume 2.0 – Probably most popular PC VJ app, now with 18 band FFT audio analyzer to link effects to music, multi-screen output, midi + dmx control + more.

VJamm 3.0 – 16 channels of realtime a/v mixing, Auto BPM clip stretching with perfect timebase, A/V mixer with OpenGL hardware acceleration.

Ableton Live 6 – now plays video ( see review ), which renders it very useful for anyone who may wish to sequence large slabs of video alongside their sounds.

2007: Your Phone is Ringing

Tuesday, January 16th, 2007

On the other end, nasal New Yorker Beasties : “Oh My God, Get It Together, Let’s See What’s Happening.”

2007

So we embraced the seriousness of climate change a bit more in 2006 – thanks partly to Al Gore’s Inconvenient Truth, and thanks mostly to two decades of scientific evidence and sweat from public campaigners. Climate change itself however, and it’s energy related cousin – peak oil, are both mere symptoms of a broader problem – humans are simply consuming too much, are living unsustainably. Even a brief dip into the statistics and graphs related to resource use & availabilities, deforestation and habitat loss, fresh water, pollution, and species extinction – shows an alarming, intensifying world picture. So given we’re expecting to swell to 9 billion human appetites by 2050, how do we get it together?

The pathways to avoiding some kind of mid 21C meltdown are many. And there are no shortage of bright-brained online writings outlining these, hoping to help us step with purpose into the new year. How do we translate this awareness into action, into tangible improvements that will leave future generations better rather than worse off?

Edgy Optimism

Provocateurs The Edge, at the end of each year ask a range of the Internationally esteemed thinkers one question. Below are a few snippets from the responses to: ‘What are you optimistic about and why?’

Geoffrey Carr from the Economist noted that “population growth is not exponential – it tends to flatten out when people get more prosperous,” explaining that rather than continue at today’s growth, worldpopulation will level out at around 9 billion by 2050.

Stephen Schneider, climatologist, believes that “Just as we have shifted and made progress with The Ozone Hole, we can do this too with climate change…”

Alun Anderson from New Scientist was feeling the sunshine: “70 per cent of current world annual energy use comes from burning fossil fuels… but the Sun is providing 7,000 times as much energy as we are using.. and there are plenty of radical new ideas for a future in which sunlight is turned straight into the forms of energy we need… just three of my favourites – First, reprogramming the genetic make-up of simple organisms so that they directly produce useable fuels. Second, self-organizing polymer solar cells – which could be ink jetted onto plastics by the hectare, creating dirt cheap solar cells the size of advertising hoardings. Third, there’s artificial photosynthesis. Nature uses a different trick from silicon solar cells to capture light energy, whipping away high-energy electrons from photo-pigments into a separate system in a few thousand millionths of a second. We are getting much closer to understanding how it’s done, and even how to use the same principles in totally different nano-materials. Although the consensus view is that the sunlight-powered future won’t be taking over until 2050, I’d place an optimistic bet that one of the many smart ideas being researched now will turn out to be an unforeseen winner much earlier.”

Howard Rheingold, author of Smart Mobs finds hope in that ‘The tools for cultural production and distribution are in the pockets of 14 year olds’.

John Gottman, psychologist, noted a major study of 186 hunter-gatherer cultures which found that when men are involved in the care of their own infants the cultures do not make war. “This greater involvement of men with their babies may eventually contribute to a more peaceful world.”

Brian Goodwin, biologist, was optimistic about ‘our ability as a species to respond to the challenge presented by peak oil, the end of the cheap energy era that has lasted about 200 years, and to enter a new cultural phase in our evolution.. (via) the proliferation of new technologies, and experiments in trading and monetary systems, that could result in robust local communities that are self-sufficient and sustainable in energy, food production, and other human needs.

Esther Dyson believes that the attention of the world’s rich will turn to solving the problems of the poor : “some people will still get rich by being first and smartest, but most will get rich by implementing well and serving broader markets. For the first time in history, power is really moving to the masses, not as a power block, but as a market.”

See also ‘Resolutions for a Post-Peak New Year

May your ollies be high in 07~!

David Lynch : Fishing With A Toothbrush

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

lynch

David Lynch’s Inland Empire ( official site, wikipedia background on it ) is slowly getting around, it’s distribution mirroring the unusual and independent path of it’s production. Wired magazine recently published a long uncut interview with the man behind much memorable cinema. He talks about his creative process, his daily weather report on his website, and the founding of a transcendental meditation foundation.

Lynch: OK, I’ve been working on this book called Catching the Big Fish, and it’s all in there. It’s changed for me. It’s gotten better. If it just stayed the same or got worse, I’d stop meditating. People get up and brush their teeth. They brush their teeth so they don’t get cavities, right?

Lynch: But if they brushed their teeth and were able to dive within to contact that pure ocean of bliss and consciousness, they’d get a huge blast of euphoric energy and be wider awake. And that ball of consciousness would expand over time, so they would really look forward to brushing their teeth every day.

It always strikes me as amazing that everyone doesn’t meditate. Because they haven’t had that transcendent experience, they don’t think they’re missing anything. I was in the same boat. I never had that, or I didn’t know I ever had it, and I was curious. I wanted it. And that’s the key thing: You’ve got to want it, even if you don’t know why. Something is there that you feel but do not know.

But I’ve always felt that there were other things to life that were not so obvious. Everyone sort of feels that there is more in the world than meets the eye, and its pull grows stronger and stronger, until they say, “I want to know what the full potential of a human being is. I want to unfold that for myself. I don’t want to stay exactly the same as I am. I want to rapidly move forward.”

Mininova has a link to trial David Lynch reading his audiobook “Catching the Big Fish_ Meditation, Consciousness, and Creativity”.. and it can be bought here.