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Showing posts with label documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documentary. Show all posts

Monday, 27 February 2012

Production Sound Mixer Video Interviews

Underneath all this typing it's sometimes nice to have a few videos to just watch and listen. Some of the rarest to find in the masses and masses of rubbish on youtube are some interviews with sound mixers (there the guys with boom operators) and sound recordists (they do both)


Desktop Computer Users and Mobile users just use the player below and further down is help to better your experience! If you like the video collection then please "Like" the playlist so more can find it, Thanks Again.





Below is a screenshot for the best user experience on your PC, Mac or mobile.
The Blue Circle Is For Full Screen Then Click The Red Circle For The Full Playlist

Heres another great one from Vimeo,




Friday, 30 September 2011

Dither and Quantization Error

Dither is an internationally applied form of noise used to randomize quantization error, preventing large scale patterns such as "banding" in images. 
Example of image "Banding"












Dither is routinely used to processing both digital audio and digital video data and usually one of the last stages in post production for compact discs. 

Quantization Error is the difference in the actual analog value and the quantized digital value. This is due to either rounding of digital views or truncation. The error is sometimes considered as an additional random signal called quantization noise because of its "stochastic" or non-deterministic behavior

Cheers Guys,

Matt Price

Thursday, 28 July 2011

The camera that changed the world

Film Link: Camera That Changed the World
Only available for the next 5 days.



This is a quick post about a documentary availible on the BBC iPlayer that shows the evolution of the portable camera and how important it was to the documentary genre. At around the 45 minuite mark there is a short section on the importance of the Nagra and sync sound. So if you can spare an hour over the next 5 days it's worth a watch.


Thanks,


Matt Price