Lee Faulkner
October 26th, 2006, 09:57 AM
Hi
I'm run a large number of edit suites at a college level art school.
Needless to say the DV (SD) revolution was a huge success story for us. The DV standard meant students could borrow our cameras or use their own. The Canon range of GL/XL 's met our needs famously, and techniques leanrned on them translated well to their range of still cameras (and more importantly, visa versa). From a technical point of view capture is no problem.
Our edit suites are equipped with decks that range from the lower end JVC dual DV/VHS models (terrific value BTW) to more serious Sony DSR decks with DVCam support. And everything remains transferrable ... all captured material can be worked on in any edit suite.
FCP handles our post production effortlessly (with a little help from Nuendo for Audio...)
Now we have begun movng into HD now. After standing back for a while I determined that I like the DVC Pro HD fromat as shot in the Panasonic HVX200 cameras. We got a couple of these and use them for adavnced projects. The system again works great. Shoot. Dump to HD. Edit anywhere.
But here's the question. It's going to be difficult to settle on DVCPro HD as a standard for everything. The Cameras are a bit expensive... workflow a little involved for the 'casual' or 'beginning' user. Those who find DV som easy to work with.
I was anticipating HDV to step up and take over for DV. Smaller, cheaper cameras... consmuer(ish) decks. Interoperability of tapes etc.
Boy was I wrong. Looks like we're of on a tangent here too. The JVC flavor of HDV .... the Sony Flavor... then there's Canon's own spin. JVC deck won't play Sony or Canon .... Sony won't play JVC... Canon even have a mode that noone has a deck for! (so I'm told.....)
Seems like *noone* wants to make a sub $3K HDV deck....
Is anyone here attemting to bring HD production to the masses? There's bunches of consumer HDV cameras... where's the rest of the workflow?
I know tape is going away... but it's still a killer medium for acquisition ... cost/convenience/capacity/familiarity/
Why why why can't HDV be the logical replacement for DV? A single standard...
Between them I think Sony/JVC/Canon are killing chapter 2 of the DV revolution!! ;-)
Someone fill me in!
Thanks
Kee
I'm run a large number of edit suites at a college level art school.
Needless to say the DV (SD) revolution was a huge success story for us. The DV standard meant students could borrow our cameras or use their own. The Canon range of GL/XL 's met our needs famously, and techniques leanrned on them translated well to their range of still cameras (and more importantly, visa versa). From a technical point of view capture is no problem.
Our edit suites are equipped with decks that range from the lower end JVC dual DV/VHS models (terrific value BTW) to more serious Sony DSR decks with DVCam support. And everything remains transferrable ... all captured material can be worked on in any edit suite.
FCP handles our post production effortlessly (with a little help from Nuendo for Audio...)
Now we have begun movng into HD now. After standing back for a while I determined that I like the DVC Pro HD fromat as shot in the Panasonic HVX200 cameras. We got a couple of these and use them for adavnced projects. The system again works great. Shoot. Dump to HD. Edit anywhere.
But here's the question. It's going to be difficult to settle on DVCPro HD as a standard for everything. The Cameras are a bit expensive... workflow a little involved for the 'casual' or 'beginning' user. Those who find DV som easy to work with.
I was anticipating HDV to step up and take over for DV. Smaller, cheaper cameras... consmuer(ish) decks. Interoperability of tapes etc.
Boy was I wrong. Looks like we're of on a tangent here too. The JVC flavor of HDV .... the Sony Flavor... then there's Canon's own spin. JVC deck won't play Sony or Canon .... Sony won't play JVC... Canon even have a mode that noone has a deck for! (so I'm told.....)
Seems like *noone* wants to make a sub $3K HDV deck....
Is anyone here attemting to bring HD production to the masses? There's bunches of consumer HDV cameras... where's the rest of the workflow?
I know tape is going away... but it's still a killer medium for acquisition ... cost/convenience/capacity/familiarity/
Why why why can't HDV be the logical replacement for DV? A single standard...
Between them I think Sony/JVC/Canon are killing chapter 2 of the DV revolution!! ;-)
Someone fill me in!
Thanks
Kee