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domingo, 24 de junho de 2007

Pinnacle Studio 11


O Pinnacle Studio já é para nós um companheiro de longa data. Isto porque desde a versão 7 que o temos vindo a usar e também a acompanhar a sua evolução, com tudo o que lhe é inerente, desde a resolução de bugs a aumentos de performance. Voltamos a abordar esta aplicação, não por acaso, mas pelo facto de muito recentemente ter sido lançada a versão 11 e que à semelhança da 10.7 pretende vir a alcançar novamente o lugar cimeiro no que toca à edição de vídeo para PC.
Actualmente a partilha de conteúdos multimédia, a alta definição e claro o Windows Vista, fazem parte das modas actuais. Ora foram estas algumas das linhas orientadoras que estiveram na concepção desta nova versão do Studio. Partilha de conteúdos motivada pelo aparecimento de diversos sítios como o YouTube, o Yahoo Vídeo, e até dispositivos portáteis como a PSP e o iPod. A alta definição dado que todos os dias chegam notícias sobre o lançamento de novos dispositivos como câmaras e televisões HD e claro o Windows Vista, já que é o substituto de um dos sistemas operativos mais populares, o XP.

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terça-feira, 19 de junho de 2007

JVC GZ-MG555 30GB Hard Drive Camcorder



The specs of the JVC Everio GZ-MG555 give the impression of a mighty camcorder. On the outside, JVC has packed on a host of manual controls, smartly placed and easily accessed. On the inside, the 1/2.5” CCD is among the largest in the consumer market. The 30GB hard drive is commensurate with other HDD camcorders in its price rage. But we have been disappointed by Everios in the past, and take specs sheets with a grain of salt. The truth can only be found by putting it in your hand. That truth: the GZ-MG555 is great for some users, but maybe not the best value in its class.

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Panasonic Joins the Hybrid Camcorder Trend with SDR-H200 and SDR-H20


January 7, 2007 - Today at CES, Panasonic announced that they will also offer two hybrid camcorders. The SDR-H200 ($799 MSRP) will feature a 30GB hard disk drive (HDD) and the ability to record video to SD and SDHC cards. The SDR-H20 ($599 MSRP) will also include a 30GB HDD and a 512MB SD card. Both will offer optical image stabilization and a 32x optical zoom.
The hybrid camcorders, Rudi Vitti stated in the press release, "are ideal for travel and event shooting.... They can hold 21times more data than an 8cm DVD, and if users do need to keep shooting before downloading a full drive, they can swtich to the SD card and continue recording without interruption."
The SDR-H200 comes equipped with the CCDs, a 10x optical zoom, and 3.1MP still recording. Reading between the lines of the press release, the model-down, the SDR-H200 has a single, smaller CCD, most likely 1/6" due to the 32x optical zoom. Both camcorders include a USB and a one-touch "DVD Copy" button, which in conjunction with the bundled software and a DVD burner allows for instant archiving.
This is a standard definition camcorder and like the SDR-S150 (Review, Specs, $699.95) SD-card camcorder video is encoded in MPEG-2. There are three quality settings which correspond to the bit rate. XP quality records at approximately 9Mbps, SP at 5Mbps, and LP at 2.5 Mbps.
Both models are scheduled for an April 2007 release.
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Dê uma imagem de desenho ao seu vídeo!!


Dê uma imagem de desenho ao seu vídeo!!

sexta-feira, 15 de junho de 2007

Serviço de TV online Joost libera acesso parcial

Serviço de TV online Joost libera acesso parcial
Processo facilita a inscrição para acessar o serviço de vídeo pela Web
Alexandre Barbosa
Agência Estado

Ainda não foi desta, vez, mas quase: o Joost, serviço de IPTV criado pelos mesmos desenvolvedores do software de VoIP Skype ainda não escancarou suas portas para todos os usuários, mas uma parceria firmada entre o blog GigaOM e o serviço permite que qualquer usuário interessado receba um convite válido em questão de minutos.
Usuários interessados ainda podem acessar a versão de avaliação do serviços por meio de convites enviados por usuários já cadastrados. A página de inscrição pode ser acessada neste link.
O Joost foi criado como uma plataforma de IPTV pelo qual os usuários podem montar grades de programação baseados nas atrações desejadas, em vez de canais na TV convencional.

Rainha se rende a tecnologia, diz jornal

Rainha se rende a tecnologia, diz jornal
A soberana de 81 anos, como você leitor, envia e-mails para seus netos
Efe
LONDRES - A rainha Elizabeth II da Inglaterra conta com sua própria conta de e-mail e envia mensagens a seus netos, revelou hoje o tablóide britânico Daily Mail.
A soberana ainda precisa da ajuda de seus assessores para receber e enviar mensagens, mas, segundo o jornal, Elizabeth II encheu a caixa de e-mails de seus familiares.
Com 81 anos, a soberana não ficou para trás em relação às novas tecnologias. Como lembra o tablóide, Elizabeth II já possuía telefone celular, com o qual manda mensagens de texto a seus netos William e Harry, e escuta música em seu iPod.
"Devido a seu posto, ela é mais partidária de mandar uma carta que um e-mail quando se trata de um assunto oficial", diz uma fonte do Palácio de Buckingham sua residência oficial, ao Daily Mail. "Mas, quem sabe, isto também poderia mudar", acrescenta.

Handycam HDR-CX7 Memory Stick PRO Duo Camcorder


April 25, 2007 – Sony continues their attempt to dominate the consumer HD camcorder today with the release of the HDR-CX7 ($1200 MSRP), their first to record exclusively to a removable flash media, Memory Stick PRO Duo. Also announced today were the HDR-SR5 and HDR-SR7, two new HDD high definition models. This brings the total number of sub-$2000 Sony HD camcorders to seven, over three times as many as Panasonic or Canon currently offers. Five of the seven utilize the new AVCHD codec.
It is Panasonic and their HDC-SD1 camcorder ($1299 MSRP) that Sony clearly has in its sights. While the companies co-developed the AVCHD codec that finally brought HD to non-tape formats like DVD and HDD, Panasonic was the first to offer a flash memory HD camcorder. Using widely available SDHC cards, the Panasonic HDC-SD1 has received some success, and was even adopted by Panasonic Broadcast as a niche professional camcorder (the AG-HSC1U (Review, Specs, Recent News, $1975.00)). Sony’s new HDR-CX7 uses their own proprietary card format, Memory Stick PRO Duo, which will likely bring additional dollars into the company.
The Sony HDR-CX7 does not ship with a Memory Stick, and the end cost slightly favors the Panasonic HDC-SD1. The SD1 includes a 4GB SDHC card (40 minutes of highest quality video), but the total package is about $100 more than the HDR-CX7. Sony currently retails a 4GB Memory Stick PRO Duo card for $129 (for approximately 30 minutes of highest quality video). An 8GB version card is also available for $299.
On paper, the HDR-CX7 has some compelling features that may push it above Panasonic’s offering. The CX7 comes equipped with a 1/2.9” ClearVID CMOS sensor, with 3,200,000 gross pixels (2,280,000 effective pixels). This is the same chip found in the Sony HDR-UX7 and HDR-HC7, and allows for stills up to 6.1MP.
Unlike the Panasonic HDC-SD1, the CX7 includes an active accessory shoe, though it is a Sony proprietary fit shoe. The HDC-SD1 has no shoe, but there are U-shaped accessory brackets available for the AG-HSC1U that attaches to the tripod hole. The Sony HDR-CX7 also offers the ability to record in standard definition, while the Panasonic does not. This feature gives consumers the option for a lower data load when capacity on a card is nearly full.
Sony is also touting the inclusion of x.v.Color on all three of today’s announcements. This re-branded xvYCC color standard offers a wider range of color space than sRGB, but currently has almost no playback support on televisions.
Other features on the Sony HDR-DX1 include a 10x optical / 20x digital zoom, a 2.7” touch screen LCD (211,000 pixels), and Smooth Slow Record, which allows for 3 seconds of overcranking at a 4x slower playback speed. A built-in flash aids in the max 2848 x 2136 stills. There is no viewfinder.
The CArl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* lens has an aperture range of f/1.8 - f/2.9 and a focal distance of 5.4 - 54mm (35mm equivalent: 40-400mm in 16:9 video and still mode). Also featured is optical image stabilization.
Ports on the HDR-CX7 include component and composite out, USB 2.0, and HDMI (not included). The camcorder falls short of the Panasonic HDC-SD1 in one key area. Unlike the other Sony camcorders ending in the number “7” (HDR-HC7, HDR-UX7, and HDR-SR7), the CX7 does not include either microphone or headphone jacks. Audio is restricted to the built-in 5.1 channel Dolby Digital mic, located on top of the body towards the lens.
The Sony HDR-CX7 is the smallest and lightest AVCHD camcorder to date, undercutting the Panasonic HDC-SD1 by 30 grams and a few millimeters. The CX7 retails for $1200 (MSRP) without a Memory Stick PRO duo card. It is scheduled to ship in June. Pre-orders are now being accepted.
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terça-feira, 12 de junho de 2007

XH-A1 Review Completo


Giving independent videographers something to choose from besides its popular but long-in-the-tooth GL2, Canon offers up two HDV models designed to appeal to the prosumer and entry-level pro markets. Derived from the same technology that the professional-level XL H1 uses, the XH A1 and the XH G1 HDV models trade the XL H1's interchangeable lens system to lower the cost by one-half to two-thirds the price of the higher-end model. The two XH models share a single body, but the G1 includes the equivalent of the XL H1's JackPack--HD-SDI output with embedded audio and time code, Genlock synchronization, and Timecode In/Out--a group of connectors critical for anyone trying to mix multiple video input sources. In addition, the SDI output is the only way to get 4:2:2 output. We tested the lower-end XH A1.
All things considered it feels comfortable shooting with the XH A1; though it weighs almost five pounds, it's still considerably lighter than most. All the buttons and controls sit in logical locations, grouped roughly by function and generally in the same locations as they appear on competing models. They're good sizes, and various bumps and divots in the buttons provide enough tactile feedback to operate without looking. A large chunk of the camcorder's architecture lets you determine the speed and subtlety with which shifts occur during shooting, including focus, zoom and exposure changes, and white-balance adjustments. (For a complete discussion of the controls, click through the slide show.)
On the lens barrel, rings of different sizes and textures operate focus, zoom, and iris. In response to complaints about the mushiness of servo-controlled focus, Canon offers a Slow speed option; that option, plus a distance readout help to maintain a finer control over focus response, but you'll probably still want to try it and compare to others if you're picky about the feel. I think it feels about the same as the Panasonic AG-HVX200's.
The same three 1/3-inch CCDs with 1080i (1,440x1,080) native resolution that drive the XL H1 sit at the center of the XH series' imaging system, and like the H1, both models can record in 1080i at 30F or 24F frame rates. The latter comes in two versions, one which records to tape at 24 frames per second, and one which downconverts from 24fps to 30fps/60i using 2:3:3:2 pull-down before recording for greater editing compatibility. Their feature sets share many of the H1's technologies, including a Digic DV II processor, Super-Range Optical Image Stabilization, and the H1's customization architecture. The XH cameras have fixed 20x zoom lenses rather than the interchangeable lenses on the XL, but they offer a wider-angle view: 32.5mm-to-650mm equivalent.
The lens and focusing system perform very well. The lens displays very good edge-to-edge sharpness, albeit with a tendency to display a bit of magenta chromatic aberration on the sides, and the center focus looks great, especially when zoomed in tight. As usual, Canon's optical stabilizer works exceptionally well, even all the way out to 20x.
With Instant AF enabled, the autofocus works quickly, and the Push AF, which activates an Instant AF override in manual-focus mode, speeds manual focus considerably. As noted in the XH series' documentation, there's a bit of an autofocus lag in 24F and 30F modes; it's perceptible, but if you shoot a lot in those modes and use AF, your shooting rhythm should adapt after a while. Canon moved the Peaking and Magnify focusing aids out to the body of the camera--they were in the menu system in the XL H1--and you'll rely on them pretty heavily; the tiny, low-resolution LCD is pretty difficult to work with.
Canon provides seven gain levels: 36dB, 18dB, 12dB, 6dB, 3dB, 0dB, and -3dB (although, irritatingly, you can only program three on the L/M/H switch. At its lowest gain, video looks incredibly smooth, and even as high as 3dB you can shoot in low light with relatively little noise. At 12dB there's quite a bit of (mostly) luminance noise, but it doesn't really obscure much detail and you can shoot in near darkness. The quiet on-camera mic works pretty well in basic up-close-and-personal shooting, but you've got plenty of add-on options should your needs be more complex.
As you'd expect from camcorders in their class, the XH's produce excellent HD and SD video: sharp, saturated and smooth. The controversy that began with the XL H1 over the relative quality of Canon's 24F versus Panasonic's 24P--implemented by models such as the Panasonic AG-HVX200--continues, and applies equally to the XH series. To summarize: Panasonic's 24P is a full 720-line frame of video captured roughly every 1/24 second. Canon's 24F "fakes" progressive scan by slightly offsetting the vertical readout of the green CCD from those of the blue and red, generating a frame with 1.5x the lines of the 540-line field, or 810 lines, albeit ones using spatial rather than temporal interlace. As a result, the quality question arises: Do Canon's pseudo-progressive frames look the same as a true progressive frame or does one see artifacts?
I didn't see any; footage I shot specifically to test for 24F artifacts looked correct to me. (I played it back directly on our reference HDTV, the 50-inch Pioneer Pro-FHD1, to bypass the myriad software issues surrounding 24fps editing and playback.) However, if you want to see a bevy of test results, you can find them in the Texas Shootout on DV.com.
At their aggressive prices, the Canon XH A1 and XH G1 look mighty attractive compared to their respective competitors in the indie filmmaker and entry-level studio markets.
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sexta-feira, 8 de junho de 2007

Microsoft Surface



Microsoft anuncia Microsoft Surface
A Microsoft anuncia o lançamento do Microsoft Surface, um novo produto que tem como principal função a melhoraria da interacção entre as pessoas e os computadores, através do reconhecimento de gestos, toques e diversos objectos, potenciando uma maior interactividade pessoa/máquina.
O Surface é o primeiro produto, disponível comercialmente, que permite transformar um PC normal numa superfície interactiva, através da qual é possível uma fácil interacção com conteúdos digitais, através de gestos naturais, toque e objectos físicos (como canetas digitais, por exemplo).
Na sua essência, esta solução baseia-se numa superfície que é possível explorar e, através da qual, é possível aprender, partilhar, criar, comprar, entre outras actividades. A solução estará brevemente disponível em restaurantes, hotéis, estabelecimentos comerciais e locais de entretenimento, e irá transformar a forma como as pessoas compram, jantam e vivem.
O factor de forma do Surface é um dispositivo relativamente pequeno, idêntico a uma mesa, que se caracteriza por ser de fácil de utilização, para uma pessoa ou pequenos grupos, e que potencia a interacção de uma forma familiar, tal como acontece no mundo real. Além disso, a solução reconhece várias dezenas de movimentos, tais como, toques, gestos e objectos únicos identificados com etiquetas, similares a códigos de barras.
O Surface será disponibilizado a parceiros com um portfolio de aplicações básicas, que incluem fotos, música, jogos, e que podem ser adaptados de forma a potenciarem e criarem experiências únicas.

terça-feira, 5 de junho de 2007

Gravador de DVD para camcorders Sony AVCHD


May 29, 2007 – Today in Japan Sony unveiled the VRD-MC5, a self-contained DVD burner that connects with select Sony AVCHD camcorders. The latest update in their DVDirect line, this is the first to support the exploding format. To date, Sony has released seven AVCHD camcorders. Prior to the VRD-MC5, a computer and conversion software was required to move AVCHD footage onto 12cm DVDs intended for playback on most home entertainment systems.

sexta-feira, 1 de junho de 2007

Matrox RT.X2


With the RT.X2, Matrox brings users real-time preview capabilities for editing HD, HDV, and SD in the same timeline. Like its SD-only predecessor, the RT.X100 ("Real-Time DV Editing Boards," Jan. '03 DV), the RT.X2 blends onboard hardware horsepower, the graphics chip of the host unit's display card, and the processing power of the host CPU to create real-time preview of effects, transitions, and composites.
http://www.dv.com/reviews/reviews_item.php?articleId=196602729
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DeckLink HD Studio


Unlike other cards in Blackmagic Design's DeckLink HD line, DeckLink HD Studio does not have HD-SDI inputs. Instead, it features HDMI and component analog video as well as analog XLR and s/pdif digital audio ins and outs. The audio and video outputs are carried on a single plug that resembles a DVI connector (so don't plug your extra monitor into it by accident like I did). That plug breaks out to give you component video and analog and digital audio I/O. The flat-socket HDMI connectors can do 8 bits or 10 bits per channel in or out, unlike the DeckLink HD Studio's little brother, the $250 Intensity HDMI card, which only can do 8 bits.
http://www.dv.com/reviews/reviews_item.php?articleId=196603088
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Boris Red 4.1

Boris Red plugs into more than 20 editing applications, including Adobe Premiere Pro, Apple Final Cut Pro, and Avid's line of NLEs. Red 4.1 supports new hosts, including AVX2 for Avid, Boris 844X and Media 100, Canopus Edius 4, Sony Vegas 7, and Apple Final Cut Pro on Intel-based Macs. Designed also for motion graphics artists (Adobe After Effects is another host), the new version features new Paint tools as well as flexible 2D and 3D titling tools, which have the ability to extrude and animate vector objects and paths.
http://www.dv.com/reviews/reviews_item.php?articleId=196602784

Libec LS38 Tripod


Quite simply the best sub £400 ENG tripod on the face of the planet. There is virtually no 'drift back' or leg 'wind up' whatsoever. The fluid motion of the pan and tilt is super smooth in all directions. It is well built and up to the usual high Japanese standards. It is quick and easy to erect and fold away. For the money, nothing else can touch it; not even close.