Bryan Roberts
October 27th, 2005, 10:18 PM
Hey all, well I'm bored waiting for the gf to get done watching Survivor (god I hate that show, I think it's the running commentary by the show host that annoys me the most, he never stops talking, now The Apprentice, that's a good trashy reality show!) but I decided why not write an update on my experience with my mac mini as a FCP workstation.
THROUGH THE RINGER:
Well I've used my mini for far larger projects than I ever planned to. Originally, it was an ice breaker for me to be comfortable owning a mac and I needed to be editing a couple of DV short films on my own in FCP and a 48 hour film festival submission. After several of these projects, I had a few months away from the mini and fcp while editing a couple of Discovery shows in Avid but I was lucky enough to be assistant editor on a super 16mm feature film being edited in FCP HD (thanks to all those who gave me advice from this board). So I was able to take some footage home when requested and start to edit scenes together for the film, at home on my mini and external FW drives. This all worked very well and the process of moving from edit bay to working scenes out at home was seamless. Well it came to a point a month or so later (long story) that I was asked to tweak and re-edit most of the film. I had been planning on purchasing one of the new dual core g5 machines but almost as a joke, decided to open up the feature (130 minutes long in one sequence) on the mini as it was all self contained on a couple of external FW drives. The project opened and was barely useable but strangely, I tried updating to FCP5 and the project became very responsive, very useable! So I ended up tweaking and changing scenes for a feature film on my little mac mini in FCP5! I must note, the media we were working with were only dv quality @ 23.98 frame rate to be later sent to the negative cutter and there were only two video tracks required. FCP only crashed a couple of times. Anyways, pretty impressive so I decided to wait on purchasing a new g5 until it is absolutely required (I had already ordered a new monitor for the project, a 24 inch Dell which the mini can power, I highly rec. this monitor by the way, especially at it's $760 price tag with coupon).
Also just recently, I cut a short little 3 minute promo video for an upcoming documentary with footage captured from a Sony FX1 shot in HDV and downconverted to SD inside a sony hdv deck sent via firewire through an external FW drive with only a mild hiccup (on one of the clips, the last 2 minutes of an hour long clip lost sync on capture but I was able to correct the audio later on). I was also able to record nice sounding VO's straight into the mini as well, with a mixer and the iMic usb cable. Obviously, audio recording isn't a hugely processor intensive task but I was just impressed with the amount of work I was able to get done with a measly mac mini. Video Monitoring has been handled with a Canopus ADVC 100 (~$200) sent out to a 14inch flat CRT Toshiba monitor via svideo, very nice quality.
BOTTOM LINE:
I said it before but now I can say it with mileage: If you're doing primarily straight cuts editing with some mild effects in FCP, even long form shows, and you aren't using anything much beyond DV (DV can look very nice when properly exposed with a nice camera like a DVX100a or the new HDV Sonys) then the mac mini can really fit the bill as a capable edit station until your workflow demands HDV, Apple's Motion or After Effects etc. (obviously, rendering anything substantial on the mac mini is like crawling uphill, in the snow, with one arm - if you're rendering in DVDSP or IDVD for a longer project, leave it overnight). Also, the extra hardware I'm using will work great with a system upgrade later on so it's not like I'm taking a big hit by using this setup (iMic, mixer, advc100, new monitor etc., will work well with a new quad g5 later down the line perhaps =) ). Anyways, thought some might be interested.
THE CURRENT SETUP:
Here's a picture of the full setup right now: (sorry for the crappy quality, we keep our place dimly lit)
http://www.definingfilms.com/newmini.jpg
1.42 Gigahertz mac mini :: 1 gig of ram
Swapped internal HD with a 7200 rpm 60 gig Hitachi
Mac OSX 10.3.9 , FCP 5
Estimated machine cost: ~$800 not including external storage
THROUGH THE RINGER:
Well I've used my mini for far larger projects than I ever planned to. Originally, it was an ice breaker for me to be comfortable owning a mac and I needed to be editing a couple of DV short films on my own in FCP and a 48 hour film festival submission. After several of these projects, I had a few months away from the mini and fcp while editing a couple of Discovery shows in Avid but I was lucky enough to be assistant editor on a super 16mm feature film being edited in FCP HD (thanks to all those who gave me advice from this board). So I was able to take some footage home when requested and start to edit scenes together for the film, at home on my mini and external FW drives. This all worked very well and the process of moving from edit bay to working scenes out at home was seamless. Well it came to a point a month or so later (long story) that I was asked to tweak and re-edit most of the film. I had been planning on purchasing one of the new dual core g5 machines but almost as a joke, decided to open up the feature (130 minutes long in one sequence) on the mini as it was all self contained on a couple of external FW drives. The project opened and was barely useable but strangely, I tried updating to FCP5 and the project became very responsive, very useable! So I ended up tweaking and changing scenes for a feature film on my little mac mini in FCP5! I must note, the media we were working with were only dv quality @ 23.98 frame rate to be later sent to the negative cutter and there were only two video tracks required. FCP only crashed a couple of times. Anyways, pretty impressive so I decided to wait on purchasing a new g5 until it is absolutely required (I had already ordered a new monitor for the project, a 24 inch Dell which the mini can power, I highly rec. this monitor by the way, especially at it's $760 price tag with coupon).
Also just recently, I cut a short little 3 minute promo video for an upcoming documentary with footage captured from a Sony FX1 shot in HDV and downconverted to SD inside a sony hdv deck sent via firewire through an external FW drive with only a mild hiccup (on one of the clips, the last 2 minutes of an hour long clip lost sync on capture but I was able to correct the audio later on). I was also able to record nice sounding VO's straight into the mini as well, with a mixer and the iMic usb cable. Obviously, audio recording isn't a hugely processor intensive task but I was just impressed with the amount of work I was able to get done with a measly mac mini. Video Monitoring has been handled with a Canopus ADVC 100 (~$200) sent out to a 14inch flat CRT Toshiba monitor via svideo, very nice quality.
BOTTOM LINE:
I said it before but now I can say it with mileage: If you're doing primarily straight cuts editing with some mild effects in FCP, even long form shows, and you aren't using anything much beyond DV (DV can look very nice when properly exposed with a nice camera like a DVX100a or the new HDV Sonys) then the mac mini can really fit the bill as a capable edit station until your workflow demands HDV, Apple's Motion or After Effects etc. (obviously, rendering anything substantial on the mac mini is like crawling uphill, in the snow, with one arm - if you're rendering in DVDSP or IDVD for a longer project, leave it overnight). Also, the extra hardware I'm using will work great with a system upgrade later on so it's not like I'm taking a big hit by using this setup (iMic, mixer, advc100, new monitor etc., will work well with a new quad g5 later down the line perhaps =) ). Anyways, thought some might be interested.
THE CURRENT SETUP:
Here's a picture of the full setup right now: (sorry for the crappy quality, we keep our place dimly lit)
http://www.definingfilms.com/newmini.jpg
1.42 Gigahertz mac mini :: 1 gig of ram
Swapped internal HD with a 7200 rpm 60 gig Hitachi
Mac OSX 10.3.9 , FCP 5
Estimated machine cost: ~$800 not including external storage