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cross-posted -- see http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?t=72491
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That other thread shows little understanding of costing, pricing, and one chip cameras (that even movie camera companies use in preference to 3 chip). So JVC HD10 and Sony AI are both credible cameras, as well as HC1 as it differs little (really serious sound recording uses a separate sound recorder). So I don't particularly want to contribute to it.
Kevin Yes, you gets heaps of processing power for $4k, leaving out all unnecessary bits and pieces that do not relate to the NLE job (and I forgot to factor in software costs I thin, so there is another $1K or so). SO that was my illustration there. Software might be around for single core and dual core, but it is progression, of writing a software structure that scales to more scores. The companies that have written for dual core before, are in a good position/experience to rewrite for more cores as they become available. The process should not be too difficult once you have mastered it. GPU etc, are another entirely different kettle of fish though, but once it is mastered for DirectX 10 or 100, it should become much more scalable experience for them. I don't say once written for direct x 9, because that is substantially different from Direct X 10/11, and substantially less performance, so the 10/11 is still a new learning experience, so to speak. The rumors, over the months, surrounding the now announced AMD take over of ATI, are interesting. I have not been posting here because they were rumours, but it goes like this, AMD (or was that Intel) was planning into taping into GPU like processing as a future processing avenue. Intel has been rumoured to be readying to counter the take over bid for ATI (who just had their Intel bus licence not renewed in another post). the interesting thing is that ATI and Nvidia are going separate ways on GPU processing at the moment. ATI has the most advanced integrated system, and Nvidia is saying they are too fr ahead of the market, and is going a more Conservative DX10 route for the moment (sort of the opposite of what happened a few years back). The more advanced structure of ATI requires more power and space, than NVIDIA's. This could result in AMD having less but bigger processing units on chip, and if Intel counters with smaller but more processing units. I wonder big but less will be able to match small but more. Intel has sold off most (if not all I am unsure) it's Xscale capacity, to fill the gap with a embedded form of the PC processor, that I imagine will be smaller and might even be related to the technology to be used in the 32 processor chip. Intel have tried this so many times in the past, and got their buts kicked ten years or so, ago, by ARM chips when they tried this with 386/486. Arm could fit many times more processing power in the same space by using an array of Arms (but then again processing array elements , like used in CELL and GPU, might matter more in todays applications), and even more again using alternative technologies, like the ones I were involved with. I am not completely negative of the H264 editing thing (especially as I read Sony plans NLE for PS3, that also is built to play AVCHD native, and they plan derivative products of the PS3 platform ;) ). Most likely Jobs was wooed by the 32 processor chip platform versus the Cell, with a but of ingenuity they should be able to add data processing units to match what CELL will do then. I still would have preferred a Apple based on CELL. If IBM gets a 100GB SD card out, P2 pricing might become a bit irrelevant, and who knows, maybe Panasonic was planning on taking advantage of this all along. So 100Mb/s might become very little, especially when you consider 1TB drives, and 200GB Disks and 3.2TB Holodisks etc, for storage coming in future years (but starting soon). |
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Like I said the A1U is a good camera but you're on some sort of super drug if you think sony or any of the other companies believe it to in the same product category as the other cameras listed. You tell sony that both the A1 and the Z1 were created to serve the same purpose and they'd laugh. No one is bashing the A1 but come on man it makes no sense to compare it to the others and even once that comparison is made the XH A1 STILL stomps all over it. The A1U was created to ride in the sidecar of the Z1U, not to be the hero camera. And enough about the HD10 and the HC1, those cameras are no longer in production, they no longer exist. Mentioning something that is no longer for sale except for overstock has no logical foundation to it. If your gonna do that bring up the original sony pd100 and every other camera to ever go to camcorder heaven. There is nothing to debate or consider in american pricing the XH A1 offers incredible value compared to the competition for what you get. That said, if you want something else go ahead that's your right. If you already own something else that's cool too, your old camera doesn't stop working because there is a new one. But let's compare carrorts to carrots instead of carrots to baby carrots. |
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There is no super drug, A1 gets better latitude (one of the fundamentals of image quality) less over saturated colour (another thing that detracts from pro image quality) or better resolution, then some of the cameras listed, and the only thing that it really lacks, apart from one manual control, and level of usability of manual control, is it's sensitivity (left out progressive image, because it depends on the job style). A professional can use it quiet well. It is true that normal one chip cameras are really inferior, because they use an inferior complimentary sensor filter instead. But, the A1 and HC1 use a RGB/Bayer filter (forget exactly which one) which are good enough for Cinema cameras, and professional still cameras, delivering color accuracy close to 3 chip, and not suffering too much in resolution, normally, then how can we say it suddenly that much less than 3 chip. Still all prosumer HD, still all recent, still all the realm of comparison. We are talking about companies upping the price of HD here, how can we, unless we compare what has been released before. The HC1 is so close behind, and the JVC is just another prosumer camera. If Canon could offer true full resolution 24/25 progressive then that would be the biggest thing for the Canon A1 (and one of the reasons I did not buy a Sony A1). But the pricing, please, for the baby cameras no more than $3K guys, actually, preferably, starting at under $2K street guys. And upping the price of top prosumer cameras, please no more than $5-6K, under 4K street preferably, unless you are going to give us a better codec with full manual lens/shutter/exposure controls. Where ever prosumer, or baby prosumer, still prosumer. |
Wayne, sorry I can't agree with you. Just a couple years ago, miniDV cameras of that form factor had MSRP's approaching $3000 US. You can make all the speculative technical apples-to-oranges analyses you want -- and seem to be very persistent in doing so -- but it won't change the fact that in today's marketplace, these cameras (including the XH's) are priced competitively. I think it is amazing that by year's end we will be able to buy a camera with 1.67MP chips, 20x L-glass, 24fps recorded to tape as 24fps, deep image control features, and a lot more for under $4000 US. Sure, I'd like to get one cheaper -- better yet, free! -- but that ain't reality. If you're one of the few who feel that none of these new relatively low cost HD cameras are worth their price, maybe you should shop for a Viper or something. But there is no point to trying every which way to argue that the manufacturers should halve their prices just because you wish it. Let's return to discussing the XH cameras themselves.
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Fact is, the sub $10K cameras are not even close to being consumer cameras any way. |
Build quality...Plastic or Magnesium?
Has anyone seen any mention as to the camcoders build? Is it plastic or magnesium body like the Sony's cameras?
Canon makes great optics, but seems so skimp on the housing, making it more plastic, as opposed to Sony's strong magnesium body's on their cameras. |
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6 years ago, some guy around my age that worked with me at a TV station that did BetaSP (we were both editors though on weekends, I'd shoot some stringer stuff exclusively for them with the XL1) and he was always determined to undermine me everywhere I went with my XL1. I'd talk about my movie, shooting stuff, etc., all with the XL1, and he'd walk buy, interrupt and say, "Prosumer." It made him look foolish and irritated me.
One day, I shot some stuff for the TV station with the XL1, dubbed it to BetaSP and handed it to him to edit. He didn't say anything about the footage, so I asked if I shot it okay and he said yeah, looked good. I told him it was the XL1 and he flipped. Never said "prosumer" again. hwm |
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Is it time to resurrect this year-old thread? I suggest those of you who are fed up with the word "prosumer" read that thread and post to it if you're interested. |
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On the inaccuracies, I am comparing the rising price of fruit, not apples and oranges. You can pay the grocery what ever you like, but the only reality is that he charges a profit between what it is made and supplied for and what people are willing to pay. I really need to make a doco on that. And that is all it was about, all the other stuff was a side track from the issue. Sorry for my statements, their is always somebody trying to peddle unreal stuff to me. Effective logical argument is the only thing to do, but our species seem far to fallible to do it, but not to argue ;). Now I'd better quit and get out of here, as originally planned (I want my freedom....). |
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Simply, the human eye does not discern detail in that way. So any loss of resolution that frame mode may introduce really is not noticable. |
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Sorry about the baby stuff Chris, not meant that way, but bottom line of semi-professional camera ranges, in reference to the baby carrots still being carrots. The other word is the de-facto standard terminology for crossover cameras often targeted at both high end consumers and low end professionals, often with features from both worlds. I fully support cameras with increased pro quality instead. And, I don't care if anybody tells me pro......, it is what you can do with it on a good day. In that way Canon has always been on top. Good luck ;). Disconnecting/unsub, it is nearly 4 am. |
I love the way Canon works. They never make a fuss about non-working prototypes.
These cameras look very interesting if you want a tricked out fixed lens camera on a budget or if you need (for some odd reason) a compact camera with HD-SDI and Genlock. It seems it could be the end of Z1 sales too. Sony better come up with something new fast. |
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I hope I haven’t opened a can of worms, but you brought it up :) |
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It would be interesting to know what pays off better in terms of sales, the Canon way or the marketing strategy of that other manufacturer - you know, racking up the hyperbole about a work in progress endless months out. On the other hand, the Canon way can also be a little unsettling. I'm half considering buying an H1 and picking up one of the new puppies later on as a b-camera, but you never know when they're going to spring an H1s on us, and it could be sooner rather than later. |
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Sorry, I don't mean to sound facetious, but I'm just trying to work out what you're saying because it seems incredible to me, not filmic at all? Perhaps I'm just being defensive because I can't see what you see... I've looked at a lot of H1 footage and it looks wonderful to me, and handled correctly, as filmic as any other 1/3" cam on the market. Admittedly, I've only been in the game five years, but I'm a keen observer. If I can't see it, I wonder if any of my clients, or the viewing public can. Quote:
So is progressive resolution of 540x540 (HVX) more resolution than frame obtained progressive of 800x540 (Canon)? I'm just quoting Adam's test numbers and trying to figure out your argument. Because surely you have to factor in the base numbers if you're saying there's a drop in resolution. No matter how they achieve it, the Canon's 24f mode is sharper than Panny's 24p. The DVX and XL2 are "true" progressive, but their res is way way lower (obviously). I don't think you can use a resolution argument to discredit frame mode. It would have to be soley on the basis of cadence. |
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You stated that it's very clear to your eye that the H1 is not filmic. That in itself is not a techincal appraisal, but a subjective one, albeit with trained eyes. So - and perhaps it was a folly - I put forward a real world situation, a completed digital film showing in a theatre, because when all is said and done, nobody cares if frame mode IS the same as progressive (by definition it's not) but whether it achieves the same results. |
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Wayne, progressive scan is progressive scan no matter how it is acheived. If it is running at 24fps with full frames it will have EXACTLY THE SAME cadence as film. There is no disputing this at all. Any notion that there is somehow a difference between an HVX200 running at 24fps, a DVX100 at 24fps and a Canon at 24fps is quite unrealistic IMHO. In fact I bet if I made a sequence using my usual techniques for filmlook using any of the new HD cameras you would not be able to tell me which was F mode and which was a true P mode. I have slow motion footage from a PDW-F330. In slow motion the resolution halves to 540 lines. Yet I still find it hard to tell. People have also told me how they thought it was shot using overcranked film in some cases. There is simply no substitute for actually using a camera, or seeing a well shot programme made with them rather than debating figures. |
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Good. Well if it is even better than the old frame mode (which I thought was rather good at the time) then there is no excuse not to use it.
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And I'm right. High Definition is defined by the ATSC as any television format with a higher resolution than SDTV. That's a fact. Now I agree with you that the common practice these days, what the market actually accepts today, starts at 720. Like you, I too would be loathe to consider a camera HD if it couldn't create pictures with true 720p resolution. But if somebody is going to suggest to me that Frame mode isn't progressive from a strictly technical standpoint, I would have to counter that from this very same strictly technical standpoint, HD starts at 721x577. From there, things can go downhill fast. If that sounds ridiculous, it's meant to be. Strictly technical definitions sometimes are not the best ways to get points across, nor are they the final arbiters of conflicting points of view, nor are they substitutes for real-world experience. The same audience, myself included, that considers 720 as the place where HD starts is the same audience that can't tell the difference between Frame mode and progressive, and wouldn't care if you showed them. |
I'm sorry, I can't see any reason for people to complain. Quite frankly, exactly where else can you get a 1440x1080 resolution 1080i HD camera with a 24p-esque option for less than $8,999 MSRP, or now, $3,999 MSRP?
True, 720p has its advantages but as was stated a long time ago, regardless of whether it is 720p or 1080i, if handled the same, the image will look identical, the only real difference comes with 1080p, but we don't have that yet in this price range. Unfortunately, there is a lacking of progressive cameras compared to the plethora of interlaced cameras and those that we do have are 720p and not the ideal 1080p. But who knows what's around the corner these days? Granted, manufacturers are using various compression schemes at this point in time for the majority of <$10,000 video cameras, but the image quality is still much better than we could hope for with MiniDV. There's also options for uncompressed HD output if you really want it, look at the HD-SDI option, from what I understand that's an amazing achievment for someone to put that on a camera below $25,000. It also opens many doors for the filmmaker in post. Looking at the XLH1, I dislike the low resolution LCD viewfinder and default image. I'm a simple guy, I'd prefer it if the camera had a good default image like the DVX or HVX, but that doesn't mean I couldn't get a similar or better image by tweaking the XLH1 to my liking. With the A1 and G1, I've got a better selection of 24fps cameras, regardless of how they get that frame rate, and I have the same options to tweak the image as I would with the XLH1. What is more impressive is that these new cameras are good enough for a film-out right off the bat (even though they might look like something you'd see on the "Regal 20" commercials at some movie theatres :) ). Also, they're cheap, you can get really professional looking 24fps HD for far, far, less than you'd pay for a Panasonic Varicam or Sony F900. If none of those options are good enough, then either wait for something better or spend extra for a higher up camera that is good enough. |
Since the discussion has strayed directly from the Canon cameras in particular, does anyone have any guess where a 3 CMOS chip HD camera might fit in this whole scheme of things. Would CMOS chips actually speed up processing in some way to make 1080p more possible ?
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If the discussion has strayed directly from the Canon cameras in particular, that means I haven't been doing my job. Let's bring it back on topic to the CCD-equipped G1 and A1 specifically, and take the suppositions about CMOS camcorders elsewhere. Thanks in advance,
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Where ? Area 51 ?
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Yes, but tread lightly there. Things have been known to disappear without a trace from Area 51.
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Oh, the mysteries of Area 51...
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