Chris Hocking
March 3rd, 2008, 01:44 AM
Hi Everyone,
A friend of mine is looking into putting together an audiovisual exhibition.
The exhibition will take place in a square room. On each of the four walls will be a video projection screen. All the screens will be showing different content, but in sync.
The sound system will effectively be 8.1, with two stereo channels for each screen plus a global sub-woofer.
This is a student project - so it doesn't have a huge budget.
The question is, what is the best method to run/control this exhibition?
In the past I've used hard drive-based video players all timecode locked together. I've also used DVD Players in the past, however there simply isn't the money for that, so the plan is to use computers instead (Macs).
How is this best achieved? With a single computer (with something like a Matrox TripleHead2Go) or four separate machines networked together? What software is available that lets you sync all the video and audio channels together?
I know of this package:
http://www.syncmaker.com/
...but it's only for PC. Does anyone know of an Mac equivalent? (Funnily enough, it'll be easier for the student to get his hands on Mac than it will be PCs!).
Any information you can provide me would be very much appreciated!
Thanks!
Chris!
A friend of mine is looking into putting together an audiovisual exhibition.
The exhibition will take place in a square room. On each of the four walls will be a video projection screen. All the screens will be showing different content, but in sync.
The sound system will effectively be 8.1, with two stereo channels for each screen plus a global sub-woofer.
This is a student project - so it doesn't have a huge budget.
The question is, what is the best method to run/control this exhibition?
In the past I've used hard drive-based video players all timecode locked together. I've also used DVD Players in the past, however there simply isn't the money for that, so the plan is to use computers instead (Macs).
How is this best achieved? With a single computer (with something like a Matrox TripleHead2Go) or four separate machines networked together? What software is available that lets you sync all the video and audio channels together?
I know of this package:
http://www.syncmaker.com/
...but it's only for PC. Does anyone know of an Mac equivalent? (Funnily enough, it'll be easier for the student to get his hands on Mac than it will be PCs!).
Any information you can provide me would be very much appreciated!
Thanks!
Chris!