Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-24 Thread Adrian Miles
there is also something called stretch film which if it became viable  
could be relevant here. I only know of one person who actually made  
something like it (using LiveStage Pro). the idea (comes from stretch  
hypertext) is that you have, say, a 2 minute version of the work, but  
at any point you can 'stretch' it to make that sequence or content  
area longer by getting more material, and so on until you may (in  
theory) view all the footage for that sequence. Bit like svg for video  
I guess.


On 24/05/2009, at 5:56 AM, Bill Cammack wrote:

 I think it really does require a tiered approach, which would be  
 similar to what you're saying... Small clips, tagged and warehoused,  
 and then making larger programs out of the smaller clips. Not  
 necessarily like a playlist function like YouTube uses, but focusing  
 information into interesting enough segments to inform your blog  
 readers and subscribers that there IS much more material if they  
 choose to go check it out... but that if they're *not* interested,  
 they won't be pelted with several updates every day, just to get the  
 media out the door.


cheers
Adrian Miles
adrian.mi...@rmit.edu.au
bachelor communication honours coordinator
vogmae.net.au



Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-21 Thread Adrian Miles
I think as Bill describes in his more recent post, imagine you've got  
heaps of short clips, each more or less about the same thing. Instead  
of editing them into works, or publishing them as single clips,  
imagine a cloud of clips, with for instance tags. (Simplest model.)  
Then you could use this to make individual works, while also letting  
all clips with a tag become separate works.

On 21/05/2009, at 10:33 AM, Kath O'Donnell wrote:

 Jay  Adrian, thanks for the examples of video tagging. Seth Keen's  
 work
 looks very cool. I always thought mpeg7 would be used for this but  
 haven't
 heard much about it anymore ( only looked into it years ago for  
 some facial
 recognition stuff which didn't end up happening). I shoot way too  
 much video
 ( take too many photos). most of it would be classed as dross to  
 anyone but
 me (Adrian :) ) but I've found I've looked back on it and found bits  
 I've
 missed etc or seen things in a different light after time, so I like  
 having
 the extra video. ( my videos are really just for me/family/friends)  
 it
 would be cool to tag it like on flickr though (but I must admit I  
 only do
 basic tagging on flickr too - not down to subject of individual  
 shots). one
 of the early videoblogging projects was for tagging clips wasn't it? I
 forget the name of it. started with M I think?


cheers
Adrian Miles
adrian.mi...@rmit.edu.au
bachelor communication honours coordinator
vogmae.net.au



Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-20 Thread Adrian Miles
hi all

Jay and I (he's currently in Melbourne, god bless 'im) were talking  
about similar stuff yesterday. Seth Keen has a system that partly does  
this. it is intended for more curatorial sorts of things, but relies  
on tags to collect clips. I've built similar, now defunct, things ages  
ago, and people like, I think it was Aasmund Garfors in Bergen, and  
also Jon Hoem (also Bergen) were playing with.

It is not that hard, it is the move from video as 'filmmaking' (lot of  
edits, relative high ratio of takes to kept footage, etc) or video as  
'careful' (due to legacy of cost, access, technology barriers, etc) to  
video as homemovie or as snapshot. We shoot heaps, just like with a  
camera we photograph heaps. flickr provided a way for us to easily  
archive, publish, share, tag, and collectively harness/use our  
snapshots. but at the moment in video the smallest 'unit' remains the  
entire show or program or clip, rather than the parts.

(On the other hand while we're all hung up on being storytellers it  
also means we're hung up on keeping our parts tightly joined otherwise  
our story might be broken. There is a tension there between the sorts  
of things that might come from 'clouds' of clips versus the usual  
corridor of shot A will always be followed by B.)

On 20/05/2009, at 9:05 AM, Renat Zarbailov wrote:

 Your thoughts??


cheers
Adrian Miles
adrian.mi...@rmit.edu.au
bachelor communication honours coordinator
vogmae.net.au



Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-20 Thread Adrian Miles
this works for me too, though in don't know if it is about being more  
in the moment or the benefit of constraints to creative practice


On 20/05/2009, at 2:53 PM, Brook Hinton wrote:

 Everyone's different about shooting ratios and frequency and what
 works for them, but I've found quite an opposite situation: when I
 place an arbitrary limit on my shooting - e.g., ok, you can only shoot
 ten minutes during the next two days, or for this particular journey
 into the world, or you have one tape for the month etc. - I get much
 more interesting material. Something about intensity of focus, about
 being aware of the change that's occurring when I press the button.
 I'm more in the moment, and do more with the moment.

 It doesn't jibe well with the fast pace and high output culture of the
 webular world though.


cheers
Adrian Miles
adrian.mi...@rmit.edu.au
bachelor communication honours coordinator
vogmae.net.au



Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-20 Thread Adriana Kaegi
    i edit as i shoot so i spend less time actually editing. focus is key. a

--- On Wed, 5/20/09, Brook Hinton bhin...@gmail.com wrote:

From: Brook Hinton bhin...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution
To: videoblogging@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, May 20, 2009, 12:53 AM











 











  
  Everyone's different about shooting ratios and frequency and what

works for them, but I've found quite an opposite situation: when I

place an arbitrary limit on my shooting - e.g., ok, you can only shoot

ten minutes during the next two days, or for this particular journey

into the world, or you have one tape for the month etc. - I get much

more interesting material. Something about intensity of focus, about

being aware of the change that's occurring when I press the button.

I'm more in the moment, and do more with the moment.



It doesn't jibe well with the fast pace and high output culture of the

webular world though.



Brook



 _ _ _ _ ___

Brook Hinton

film/video/audio art

www.brookhinton. com

studio vlog/blog: www.brookhinton. com/temporalab


 

  




 
















  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-20 Thread Adrian Miles
Yep, but in some contexts we don't want or need to do this. eg  
observational doco, ethnography. And we can also think about how on  
one hand having a constraint like editing in camera etc is highly  
productive (in Melbourne we have, or had, the white gloves festival  
which was film, one roll, all had to edited in camera, well not edited  
but you know what i mean). But on the other hand you can also think  
about how working like that could also come from a time when film was  
expensive so you didn't just shoot.

Now that video is disposable the tension is both what to do with it  
all (and how), and also how do I not just shoot dross.


On 21/05/2009, at 1:15 AM, Adriana Kaegi wrote:

 i edit as i shoot so i spend less time actually editing. focus  
 is key. a


cheers
Adrian Miles
adrian.mi...@rmit.edu.au
bachelor communication honours coordinator
vogmae.net.au



Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-20 Thread Adrian Miles
quoting myself (on strike today so diligently not doing work...)

there was a hypercard stack made by an anthropologist/ethnographer  
years ago that let her add video and then in effect tag it (it was  
before we had tags) so that observational footage could be  
restructured in multiple ways. And after 15 minutes of Google:

http://orion.njit.edu/merlin/tools/c25/index.html

(all the programming architecture of QT comes from hypercard)

On 21/05/2009, at 9:53 AM, Adrian Miles wrote:

 Yep, but in some contexts we don't want or need to do this. eg
 observational doco, ethnography


cheers
Adrian Miles
adrian.mi...@rmit.edu.au
bachelor communication honours coordinator
vogmae.net.au



Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-20 Thread Kath O'Donnell
Jay  Adrian, thanks for the examples of video tagging. Seth Keen's work
looks very cool. I always thought mpeg7 would be used for this but haven't
heard much about it anymore ( only looked into it years ago for some facial
recognition stuff which didn't end up happening). I shoot way too much video
( take too many photos). most of it would be classed as dross to anyone but
me (Adrian :) ) but I've found I've looked back on it and found bits I've
missed etc or seen things in a different light after time, so I like having
the extra video. ( my videos are really just for me/family/friends) it
would be cool to tag it like on flickr though (but I must admit I only do
basic tagging on flickr too - not down to subject of individual shots). one
of the early videoblogging projects was for tagging clips wasn't it? I
forget the name of it. started with M I think?
kath


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



RE: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-19 Thread Rambos Locker
Every time I sit down to edit I wish I had not shot so much
footage..hehehe. Funny thing is, some of the best videos I've done have
been hurried, dropped onto the time line, music added then rendered
without preview and they turn out little gems. I love it when that
happens.
 
Actually the new Sony Vegas Production Assistance Plug-in is all about
hands-off process automation, perfect for people who create standard
format videos like daily shows or weekly shows or even same day events.
If these templates could be embedded in the Camera you would see much
more footage presented and not left to rot on stored hard drives. 
 
Cheers Rambo 
http://rambos-locker.blogspot.com 
 
-Original Message-
From: videoblogging@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:videoblogg...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Renat Zarbailov
Sent: Wednesday, 20 May 2009 9:05 AM
To: videoblogging@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution
 




I too tend to film more than I can edit with a 60GB HDD camcorder. Since
I only shoot spontaneous situations improv-style interactive comedy
(www.mrthyself.com)I approach filming with a motto, Shoot first, ask
questions later. Far too many times there were cases when I didn't have
my cam with me but situation was perfect to be captured. The
availability of huge hard drives in consumer cams allow for possibility
to shoot more noise than signal. By signal I mean something interesting
- worthwhile. In my cam I have a way to divide video clips and delete
the unwanted before I even plug the cam to a computer for backup. So on
my commute from Manhattan to Brooklyn I peacefully edit out the crap
without wasting time when at the PC. 

I am thinking about going away from the resource-hungry, albeit storage
efficient, AVCHD codec to get the newest marvel from JVC - GY-HM100U.
Though it uses dual SD-card approach, the video is pristine, let alone
the low-light filming and 3CCD's... Making this switch will make me more
efficient about sensing where worthwhile action is. 

I dream about a day that internet has enough universal hi-speed
connectivity to allow raw footage stored online in a huge video pool
from around the world. This way people can both contribute as well as
take from this pool of footage where video can be searched by keywords.
Imagine the possibilities? :) There would have to be some in-camcorder
system for tagging videos, GPS (Sony's consumer HDR-XR520V), as well as
scene/face/motion detection. So the cam writes its EXIF (still cameras
use this for exposure etc) info about what it recognized in the video
scene and tags it into the video file.

I am very lazy when it comes to editing, I have a huge load of footage
sitting on multiple hard drives waiting to be edited. I am hoping that
camcorder manufacturers will soon add ability to add premade editable
titles and end credits right in-camcorder. This way the filmmaker simply
houses the footage between the title and the end credits while on the
road, glues the resulting video, transfers this video file to a
computer and, viola, it's ready for transcoding and publishing. :) It
would be nice to have transcoding ability in camcorder as well but so
that it's redundant allowing to be able to film while this process is
taking place. Imagine, you activate Youtube HD H.264 transcode and
within an hour you get the ready-to-upload file?

Your thoughts??

Renat Zarbailov of Innomind.org

--- In videoblogging@ mailto:videoblogging%40yahoogroups.com
yahoogroups.com, Bill Cammack billcamm...@... wrote:

 Hey All! :D Hope everyone's well and in good spirits. I haven't been
around the email group, but I've been on the scene this whole time.
Actually, recently, I had the pleasure of running into Jay Dedman
unexpectedly @ Burp Castle haha, Great bonus to my day. :D
 
 Anyway..
 
 I recently bought a camera that connects to your computer via USB and
fits in your pocket. I already had an HD camera, but I wanted something
for run-n-gun. My goal was to achieve daily video output via filming at
least 5 upload-worthy segments each week, or at least in one day, so I
could release them during the week.
 
 What I found was that depending on what your style is, those cameras
can hold a ton of footage. If your style is to run the camera and hope
something happens, you won't get much. If your style is to recognize
potential moments and be prepared, what you end up with is a bunch of
snippets that amount to more footage than you needed for that week.
 
 Actually, I should back up here. Video is how I express myself. It's
my hobby as well as what I do for money. When I'm not creating video for
a client, I'm creating video for myself.. because this is what I do. If
this were a business application, it wouldn't matter how much I shoot,
because it would all be funneled into the allocated release date and TRT
of the production and anything that's excess would be discarded...
Except, I don't shoot video to discard it. I shoot video to express it.
I shoot to share

Re: [videoblogging] Re: Frequency of Distribution

2009-05-19 Thread Brook Hinton
Everyone's different about shooting ratios and frequency and what
works for them, but I've found quite an opposite situation: when I
place an arbitrary limit on my shooting - e.g., ok, you can only shoot
ten minutes during the next two days, or for this particular journey
into the world, or you have one tape for the month etc. - I get much
more interesting material. Something about intensity of focus, about
being aware of the change that's occurring when I press the button.
I'm more in the moment, and do more with the moment.

It doesn't jibe well with the fast pace and high output culture of the
webular world though.

Brook



___
Brook Hinton
film/video/audio art
www.brookhinton.com
studio vlog/blog: www.brookhinton.com/temporalab