Circular Logic: 6 Loops in Wolfville
Why blip.tv Rocks
There are many places to upload and share video now and it’s very easy to view and create it too. But a while ago I found blip.tv and liked it right away because of the people, the technology and how they do things. What was surprising to me was how everything that I wanted to do was in blip.tv when I started using it. I could cross-post to a blog, I could cross-post to the Internet Archive, and I could set the licensing and add a Creative Commons license to video. They also transcode video to Flash to let you view it just about anywhere. It’s made me shoot and upload more video, which I’m enjoying a lot.
Those are reasons to use blip.tv to upload video, but what makes them rock is that they’re a small and committed group of cool people who are doing this. You can have the best technology in the world, but without the people you’ve got a big, empty machine. I sent a note to them when I mentioned blip.tv on commandN and 2 of the 5 founders emailed me back right away thanking me. The support from blip.tv is amazing and fast with apparently a very small core group of people. I had a small problem when I was uploading some video and sent an email. Within an hour I had a response, and from the time that Jared (one of the cofounders) had started writing the email to me to when he sent it, the problem was fixed. Now that’s remarkable service for something that is free.
So now I’ve been trying to make and share more things on my blip.tv blog and it’s a great tool that encourages you to create more. Thanks blip.tv, you guys rock!
tags: blip.tv, video, sharing
commandN Episode #58
The 58th episode of the video podcast commandN is live and ready for download now. I’ve been helping tape the segments from Halifax and have made a few appearances as well. Since it’s the Summer and I’ve been on vacation, it’s been possible to spend a bit more time working on the segments and that means that we’ve gone to some interesting locations and continue to shoot in ways that are more fun. If you haven’t looked at commandN yet, it may be a good time to check it out to get caught up with technology trends with a Mac flavour. In this episode Jeff and I did the webPICKS segment from Halifax where I talked about Dabble, which is a great way to find and share video. We shot it in the Hydrostone neighbourhood, which has some neat views of the city through the trees.
tags: commandn, video, technology, news
My iPod With Video
I’ve had my new 30 GB iPod with video for about a month and a half now and I’m a bit surprised at how different it is from the iPod Shuffle that I used previously. The obvious difference comes from having a screen and being able to play video. But what I wasn’t expecting was that I’d listen to a lot more music. With the Shuffle I occasionally would use autofill, but most of the time I would have a few albums and favourite tracks and have most of it filled with podcasts. I’d carefully choose the podcasts and would regularly rotate them.
Now I don’t have to choose a limited selection with all of my music on the iPod and my podcast subscriptions have grown dramatically. In the early days of podcasting when I didn’t have an iPod I would carefully choose 80 minutes of podcasts or music and burn a CD for the drive to Halifax each day. With the Shuffle I’d always have something to listen to, but now with the bigger iPod I have much more than enough to listen to. The increased choice is both good and bad. Sometimes it takes me longer to choose what to listen to, but overall I love have a queue that is always full of something to enjoy.
I’m listening to a lot more music and watching a bit more video, but most of the time with the white earbuds is spent on music. I’m buying more music now (from both iTunes and Bleep), but I’m also listening to a great deal more Creative Commons music as well. My current favourite podcasts now are Vu d’Ici / Seen From Here (music), CC365 – Creative Commons 2006 Calendar (which provides a new CC licensed song every day!), The Revolution (CC licensed music and interviews), Big Shed (audio documentary), KCRW’s The Treatment and The Business (two shows about the film and tv industry), 43 Folders (productivity tips), The Ricky Gervais Podcast (comedy) and my newest discovery, Inside the Net (interviews and discussion of new Web trends). On the video side there are only two vidcasts (vodcasts?) that I never miss and they are the daily Rocketboom and the weekly Command-N (that I’ve helped tape a few segments for) and they both feature tech news. An odd thing is that I prefer watching them on the iPod’s small screen better than on the computer screen. Maybe it’s because it’s more personal and connected to me. The context that media is consumed within is very important and it seems that tiny video on a tiny screen isn’t as bad as tiny video on a larger screen.
tags: podcasts, ipod, vlog, vidcasts
Final Cut Pro HD
I’ve been working with Final Cut Pro for a long time. It’s one of those programs that I loved right from the first time that I’ve used it. It feels comfortable to me and it’s like working with an old friend. With the latest version which adds HD instead of a version number (but it’s really version 4.5) it’s even better. I haven’t done any HD stuff with it, but someday I’m sure that I will. What I like about FCP is that it doesn’t get in my way. I can sketch out ideas fairly quickly now and don’t have to think much about how I will do it. When I’m editing I want to focus on the story I’m telling and how things will look and sound without needing to remember a lot. One of the challenges with any application that you’ve been using for a while is to learn new tricks and to break out of old habits. I’m using some of the new features such as the full-screen preview with an external monitor. It makes a big difference in how I work. The other thing is that I’m consciously trying to work in a more visual way and moving away from a list of clips to thumbnails arranged in a bin. My secret dream is to combine some of the very cool XML parts of FCP with CVS to have a way to roll back to different edits and allow multiple editors to work together. All of the pieces seem to be there and I’m hoping that Apple is thinking this way too. I would love to set something like that up, but I don’t know if I’ll have the time. Wouldn’t it be great to have something like a Project Manager that would let you check out the latest cut of the film that you’re working on? You’d have the captured footage on a local hard drive and would just need the XML that describes the timeline. Then I could change one part of the timeline and someone else could change the other. You’d just need to make sure that your footage was in sync and it would work. I’m working on a simplified version of this (without CVS) that will use an iPod and maybe iDisk to share and synchronize things, but true version control would be the ultimate goal.




