559 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
559 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
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TRANSCRIPT OF SEMINAR:
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"Macintosh in Film and TV Production"
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MacWorld Expo, San Fransisco, January 17, 1986
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(Edited for Clarity and Brevity)
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PARTICIPANTS:
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ARTHUR GREENWALD, Moderator, Creative Services Director, KDKA-TV/Pittsburgh
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RICHARD HART, Co-Host "Evening Magazine", KPIX-TV/San Fransisco
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STEVE KOTTON, Co-Owner, Pacific Video Resources/San Fransisco
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ANTHONY REVEAUX, Media Critic, Lecturer in Film History, Sonoma State Univ.
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GREENWALD: This session came about largely out of my own frustration in
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calling everybody I could think of at Apple to get some support in marketing
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the Macintosh to our industry, film, television production, advertising... It
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seems to me obvious that a graphics oriented machine like the Macintosh has
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obvious advantages for graphics-oriented industries like ours, but those
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advantages aren't always obvious to our employers. In commercial television
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especially where the business side is very often separated from the production
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or creative side. Business decisions such as bulk purchasing or compatability
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don't always have a lot to do with how computers are really used on the job.
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Today we'd like to touch on today is the success we've had in using the
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Macintosh in our own work, and we've also invited here today some developers of
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specialty products for our industry. They'll get a chance to say a few words
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about their product.
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I'll begin by describing how I use my Macintosh in local television production.
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I was first attracted to Mac for its graphic potential, but I became a junior
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Mac Evangelist because it's so easy to use that it occured to me that with the
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high turnover rate of employees in TV stations and ad agencies that this was a
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pretty vital characteristic, too. You can actually train a short term employee
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in a day to actually use the machine. And then because it's so easy to use,
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it's self-reinforcing, people continue to use it.
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I immediately started using MacPaint to design print ads and simple storyboards
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for dramatic scenes and for the simple animation our station producuces. It
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was invaluable a communications tool. I could take my description of how our
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logo should move or shimmer or so forth, take that to the station manager and
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show the proposed animation step by step. Like any storyboard it gave us a
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common means of discussion, but it was much easier to revise. Since then I've
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come to use Hayes' Smartcom II software with a Hayes modem which lets you use
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one picture at a time from the Scrapbook and show it and change it in real time
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over phone lines. So that's a real godsend to be able to talk to an animator
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in Los Angles while I sit at my desk in Pittsburgh. That can eliminate
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unnecessary and costly trips to the west coast.
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Word processing. I prefer Microsoft Word if only because it can open more
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windows that MacWrite. Just that ability to change type sizes, which we take
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for granted as Mac owners, well that's a real advantage when you're trying to
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indicate the relative size of supers or text in a print ad. I've abandoned our
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usual art order form because the output of the Macintosh shows what I'm looking
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for much more clearly.
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One general observation is that some of the specialty software that I THOUGHT
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would be terrifically useful--- such as Videoworks and Slideshow Magician, to
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name two I admire a great deal--- I haven't found much opportunity to use those
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in my work. We have too many deadlines in local TV for me to take the time to
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use that software to make polished presentations. Perhaps those of you in
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advertising who can take more time with each job have found those more useful.
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I find MacPaint and MacDraw do more or less what I need to do.
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Finally, since acquiring a modem, I've gotten very involved in telecom-
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municating. I'm particularly active with CompuServe. I'm an Associate Sysop
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now for the Broadcast Professionals Forum on CompuServe, which is an exciting
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new way for us to share ideas and opinions about our industry instantaneously.
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It's also a good way to upload specific problems or questions to the board and
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come back a few hours later and get some good professional replies, not merely
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technical tips, but creative ideas on lighting, promotion, casting and more.
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Plus a variety of freelancers have begun to upload descriptions of their
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services and where they work, etc. It could very well become a new way of
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networking freelance work.
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Now Steve Kotton will describe how the Macintosh and Lisa have been useful to
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his independant video work.
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KOTTON: Yes, I was one of those fortunate or unfortunate souls who got into
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icons very early. I was a little disappointed with Apple's response to it, but
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I'm very excited to see the kinds of hardware and applications that are here
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today.
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I run a small facility here in San Fransisco, Pacific Video Resources, we
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function both as a facility, we have three complete edit rooms, but we also do
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full productions, documentaries and other programming that's on from the
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commercial networks to syndication, cable, all over the place. I'll just run
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through some of the software we have and use on a day to day basis and why the
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Mac has become so essential for a creative small business.
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First, I'd like to agree with Arthur about how easy it is to use, and to train
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freelancers... in twenty minutes. They can start real work for you almost
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immediately. I have colleagues who have owned IBM's and they still don't use
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them.
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For scheduling edit rooms and production equipment, Front Desk is a wonderful
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piece of software. It can schedule different times, months, plus it does
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reporting functions for billing. Check it out, it's really a very good
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program.
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Overvue. We checked out about ten databases. We're using Overvue for a couple
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of specialized functions. For equipment rosters, serial numbers, for insurance
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companies, and to log maintenance.
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MacDraft. We have our entire facility diagrammed. All the special equipment
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we've made up is all totally documented on MacDraft. Being able to just pop in
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a disk and just check out an area where a wire may be bad, for engineering it's
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just amazing. Our three edit suites were designed on MacDraft. I designed a
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production truck this summer using MacDraft. It's really an amazing tool.
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MacPaint is wonderful for storyboards, especially for effects work where you
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can get into detail and show how that effect is going to look and when and
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where it takes place on the screen. I have used Videoworks for a certain bit
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of animation and while it is more tedious than just MacPaint it certainly is a
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nice little package.
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Using Excel. I find Excel to be one of the best spreadsheets that I've seen
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coming down the pike. I put my form of the AICP bidding form into Excel and
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it's really a great spreadsheet for that. Glenn Przyborski in Pittsburgh has
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placed the entire bidding form into Excel and it's extremely useful. It's
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great that you can get on the phone and within 5 minutes have at least a good
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start of a bid that used to take hours and hours to do.
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There's another program you out to check out it's called Document Modeler by
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the Model Office company. If you do a lot of correspondance which we do when
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we're doing bids or talking to clients, it's sort of a form letter generator
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but much more personalized. You can input a number of different responses and
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then pick and choose among them to fit the job that you've got. It really puts
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out a letter that is very personal and yet is a form letter that gets those
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responses out quickly to clients.
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Finally, we also use Pagemaker a lot. We try to do our own publicity in house
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and we do a newsletter once a month, all on the Mac, all on Pagemaker and the
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Laserprinter. We also use MacDraw and the Laserprinter to design shooting
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schedules, editing forms, logging forms, character generator forms...
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The Macintosh still has a ways to go in terms of specific pieces of software
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for our needs, but it's still far ahead of any other computer out there. With
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its graphics capabilities and the variety of software, it's really ideal for
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our industry.
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HART: The show I do here in San Fransisco on KPIX, Channel 5 is Evening
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Magazine. In most markets around the country it's called PM Magazine. The
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distinction is that those stations owned by Westinghouse Broadcasting call the
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show "Evening" and anybody who buys the show from us calls it "PM." We shoot
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100% of our show on location. We shoot nothing in the studio.Our kind of work
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is different from what a television newsroom might do. I worked in the first
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broadcast newsroom -- radio or TV -- that was computerized. That was KCBS, the
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CBS-owned radio station here in San Fransisco. It's about 11 years ago that
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they first brought in terminals. That, of course, met great resistance from
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the old-time reporters at 'CBS who had covered Pearl Harbor. Their favorite
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was the old Olympia manual typewriter. And they scurried and hid them away
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under their desks so when they had to do "news" they'd haul out the Olympias.
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This is true!
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The NEW hot setup is one designed by a guy who used to work for Colorgraphics.
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Imagine a guy working on a live newscast for radio who wants to constantly
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monitor Associated Press, United Press for bulletins. Now those services code
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their stuff "Level 1..2..3" alerts. Audio feeds, too. It would be nice if you
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were delivering a newscast and on the radio or something and sudddenly the
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corner of your screen would flash and alert you to a "Level 1" situation, you'd
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hit a key combination and be reading what's available.
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The guy who left Colorgraphics has developed a very Mac-like system now. But
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he's not allowed to compete with his old company for another two years in this
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country so he can only do it in Australia, Japan, and in some countries in
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Europe. And I'm on my way to see it next week, but they tell me it uses a
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mouse and the whole system such as we dreamed of ten years ago, very well.
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He's done this on an IBM PC system and he's having a lot of problems with
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resolution because among other things, he uses it for editing tape too. He has
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a little image on the screen of two reels. When you're splicing audio tape,
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the tape is literally spliced. The system uses speech digitization that is so
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good that you can actually edit audio on the screen with the mouse. I'm
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convinced there IS a way to do all of that on the Macintosh. He began in the
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IBM world, and he strictly used IBM terminals, I don't think he's explored the
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Macintosh. I'm going to talk to him next week about that, to see whether his
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company wants to do something of that nature on Macintosh.
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The ideal newsroom situation would be to read right off the screen the entire
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newscast and as the news changed or new news came in, instead of someone
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handing you copy, it would be scrolling on the prompter off of a computer
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screen. Nobody's doing that yet. It's possible now, but everyone's afraid to
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take the first step just as they were with the rest of the equipment. When it
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comes to using electronic equipment for typing news, our newsroom at KPIX is as
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backward as any in the country. They still type manually and scroll taped
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sheets of paper through the machine. (SYMPATHETIC LAUGHTER) I mean, it's 1986
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and my station is still hand typing with the big typewriters that have the big
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letters on them. And the last two news directors have this GREAT reason why
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they haven't switched over: "Well, we're waiting for the price to come down."
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(LAUGHTER) "Or until they build a better system." So figure by the year 2012 we
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ought to get electronics in there.
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Typically what we at Evening Magazine do in a day is shoot a daily half-hour
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show which is divided into 3 or 4 feature stories, each of which is scripted
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and edited -- then the introductions, the "Good evenings," etc. which are
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wrapped around that. Obviously we do a lot of writing for the show, but not on
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a deadline basis as the newsroom does. If we want we can do our typing in the
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field.
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Typically, if we shoot a story -- say a 5 minute feature that's going to air in
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2 weeks (We shoot about 30:1, about 30 minutes of tape for every 1 minute of
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story)-- there's a producer charged with pre-editing that story, doing a cut
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sheet (edit plan) for the editor, which contains the incues and outcues of cuts
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he wants to use from the interview. It also has the voiceover script for me or
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my co-host to record. Basically it's a sheet of paper that maps out the order
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of all the pieces of audio and video that make up the story. This process may
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take two or three days so we have the opportunity to trade ideas.
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A lot of conferencing and changes take place before video editing. Usually
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that means a lot of pencil editing, but obviously it's better and easier to
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make those changes electronically, on disk, or better yet, by leaving drafts
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for each other on a system like CompuServe. (Incidentally, although Art and I
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work for the same company, we MET on CompuServe.) For the past year, several of
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the producers and I do just that. One of the producers will upload his script
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to CompuServe. Then at my leisure the next day at home or even at my desk at
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work, I can download his script. I can edit it electronically and if he's
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happy with my changes, either of us can print it out to be recorded in the
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booth.
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We do this for about two or three scripts a week. The nice part about storing
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it on CompuServe is we don't have to both be online at the same time. We
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travel a lot and this system allows us to download scripts anywhere there's a
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phone. If I have to re-record a line while I'm out of town, I'll sometimes
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record the new script onto a videocassette in a hotel room or wherever, and
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ship it back by air.
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The next area is graphics. Now a Macintosh graphic can be uploaded for me to
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download so that the editor can get an idea of how the pictures should go
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together. Now a cut sheet with incues and outcues is nice but we can actually
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give an idea of how the picture flow ought to go in the piece. What we're
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aiming for is for the producers to upload a kind of storyboard to guide me and
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the editors. I think the Macintosh is the only thing that will allow us to do
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that kind of thing efficiently and on a regular basis.
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The funny thing is that KPIX has about 300 employees and all the Macintoshes
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are coming in the back door. Because the official word from our computer
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headquarters on the east coast is the company will support only certain
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Burroughs and IBM equipment. So that's all we can buy. Some people have
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hidden Macs in their operating budget instead of their capital budget and other
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tricks.
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There'a guy at our station responsible for commercial production who's been
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experimenting with Concertware and many other programs trying to find one to
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provide musical accompaniment for the jingles and commercials produced at KPIX.
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There's a freelancer who will do a complete transcript of a videotaped
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interview for a producer and put them on a disk. So when our producer writes
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the script, he can for instance, in Word, put up two windows. In one display
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the actual transcript of what was shot on tape and in the other window write
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his voiceovers and how it will be cut together. There are some other uses
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which are more esoteric, but that's the basics of how we're using the Mac right
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now.
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REVEAUX: We've talked about film and television. I also work in multi- image
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slide prodution. That's an area where the Mac's pixels are only being
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scratched, but which has a lot of application to film and TV. Right now it's
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only terms of doing scripts. When I did the cover story for Macworld, I made a
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list of all the ways people had scrounged trying to come up with a way to
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process two-columns of text for scripts, even in MacProject. We don't really
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have that ability yet. What we're going to need eventually is some sort of
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integrated script format that chains your two columns together shot by shot.
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So that even 30 pages in if you make a change in a shot, it will always keep
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the shot number, the sound and picture, chained together. I hope we see that
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in our lifetimes.
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One nice thing is when you're doing scripts for clients is that with MacPaint
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and Clip Art you can have a nice big copy of your client's logo on your cover
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page. The library of Clip Art expandeth as we speak. Right now I've been
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doing more slide shows in terms of projection for performance in the art world.
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Opera, theatre, dance. Right now I'm working on a full- length avant garde
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opera By David Ahlstrom the San Fransisco composer based on the writings of
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e.e. cummings. And for the first time now, instead of doing it all
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photographically, I'm doing it mostly on the Mac. And here's one thing I've
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found, to get this kind of vivid neon look, of letters or pictures, you bring
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it in there and then just select Invert. Then put a colored gel in front of
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your camera lens of whatever color your want those lines to be. You have no
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idea what I went through to achieve that same effect photographically. You
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have to take into account the blue cast of the Mac's tube.
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Some of the most exciting new technical developments for using the Mac in our
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industry are the audio digitizers that are now available. Just as video
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digitizers like MacVision and Thunderscan can transfer external images into
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MacPaint, you can now do the same thing with sound. You can digitize a sound
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in a manner similar to the high-end machines like the Kurzweil or Mirage (they
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cost tens of thousands of dollars.) The Kette Group, The MacNifty people, offer
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a low-priced digitizer called the Sound Cap. It includes some clever "goodies"
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including an eerie one called TypeWriter. It mimics the sound of an old Smith
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Corona manual as you type on your Mac. Now you can have a sound effect or a
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voice or music in short files, limited only by memory.
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There's a new utility now in development called Sound to Video which allows you
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to put these sounds into VideoWorks. It's adds sound effects, or your own
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voice. I mean, Macintalk is nice but it speaks in "droid."
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Magnum is about to release Slide Show Magician 1.3 which is really excellent.
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Not only does it have sequencing but also cinematic wipes, which in
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multi-imaging you'd need at least a six projector show to do that convincingly.
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With THEIR sound digitizer called Natural Sound, you can then hook these sounds
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into Slide Show Magician. VideoWorks can do a splendid slide show also. In
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fact, with Slide Show Magician and the sound program, you can have it actuate a
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tape deck, audio or VCR, OR, you can have the tape deck trigger the Mac. It's
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also coming with a couple of disks of digitized sound effects. I think of it
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as Clip Art for the ears. I'm sure we'll be seeing developers coming out with
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"albums" of sounds from nature, space sounds, etc. Some sound files are
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already available on CompuServe. What's more Slide Show Magician incorporates
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Macintalk. More and more Mac programs are coming out with digitized speech and
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sounds.
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A few other things that our here... Graphics Magician by Penguin Polarity
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Software, no better or worse than Ann Arbor's animation program. The main
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thing is that it has full programmability. If you know Basic or C or Pascal,
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it gives you the program hooks to put animation sequences in your program.
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Another animation program coming out is MacMovies by BechTech which is full
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screen 30 frame per second animation to be released in about 2 months, to be
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used with the Chromatron Color System.
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Also Easy 3-D really IS easy, I've used it. You really can create shaded solid
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models within reason.
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|||
|
Also coming up is ComicsWorks by Mike Saenz who did SHATTER. Let me tell you,
|
|||
|
that is going to be one of the hottest things and here's why. You strip away
|
|||
|
the bug-eyed monsters and rocket ships that Mike has so carefully drawn there
|
|||
|
and it's one of the best programs for quickly mixing graphics and text that
|
|||
|
I've ever seen. It allows word processing in captions and balloons. It's
|
|||
|
ideal for storyboards. This industry is really so funny. Here we have this
|
|||
|
marvellous program. Now if he called it "Business Comic Works" then it would
|
|||
|
be respectable (LAUGHTER.) It's due out mid-April by Mindscape.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are a lot of real sleepers out there that maybe we can use in our work.
|
|||
|
One of them is Fontastic, by Aldus, a wonderful font editor. If you do nothing
|
|||
|
else from Fontastic but switch things around from fonts, you can customize a
|
|||
|
font with a lighting grid or camera position markers, you can actually "type"
|
|||
|
into MacPaint diagrams of dials, lighting grids, etc. It's wonderful for
|
|||
|
training purposes. Arthur?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREENWALD: Thanks, Tony. In a moment, we'll hear from some of the developers
|
|||
|
of specialty hardware or software for our industry, but first a word about
|
|||
|
finding software that will let us process text in columns. It's true that it
|
|||
|
doesn't exist. I've even resorted to using MacDraw which at least lets you put
|
|||
|
the text for a short script in columns, but with no word processing ability.
|
|||
|
But the people from Microsoft, who produce Word, are sympathetic to the problem
|
|||
|
and have said that if enough people write, they will very seriously consider
|
|||
|
implementing that in a future version. In fact at one time it was planned as a
|
|||
|
Word feature. The person you can write to, if you'll please join my letter
|
|||
|
writing campaign, is Mary Batterson, Public Relations Supervisor, MICROSOFT,
|
|||
|
10700 Northup Way, Box 97200, Bellevue, WA 98009.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I mentioned before that you could write to me, and send me a blank disk, and
|
|||
|
I'll duplicate onto it the various software templates we're collecting for film
|
|||
|
and TV producers. Send the disk to Arthur Greenwald, KDKA-TV, One Gate Gateway
|
|||
|
Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15222.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So if the developers would now raise your hands, we'll invite you up one at a
|
|||
|
time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN: I'm from Stanford University and we've developed a blocking simulation
|
|||
|
for the theatre students. We hadn't really thought about it in terms of film
|
|||
|
when we started, but some people have expressed interest in using it. We've
|
|||
|
developed an interface which the students can learn in 15 minutes and block a
|
|||
|
scene in about 2 to 3 hours. You can have the characters turn--their heads
|
|||
|
turn independant of the body-- you can have them standing up sitting down,
|
|||
|
lying or kneeling. We picked these as major body positions that represent
|
|||
|
life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
REVEAUX: I think you're being much too modest about this.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREENWALD: I agree.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HART: This is my favorite program of the entire show here. Some of you have
|
|||
|
seen it. It's in the University Consortium corner. This is what impressed me
|
|||
|
about it. If you're blocking out a scene, you've got a library --- is it a
|
|||
|
library yet or is it a MacPaint document?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN: It's a library (of backgrounds) but any MacPaint document is a stage.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HART: Shakespeare said that (LAUGHTER).You've three elements, you've got
|
|||
|
characters, you've got movements on the stage, and the stage. The amazing
|
|||
|
thing is you've got a stage you can make in MacPaint then a menu of characters.
|
|||
|
Maidens, uh...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AUDIENCE: Swains!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HART: Thank you! Swains, swainettes. If you want to populate your stage with
|
|||
|
characters you click on them. And you not only click on them as designated
|
|||
|
players, but you can click on a subcategory of "Extras" then from that menu you
|
|||
|
can choose potted plants and balconies and things. (LAUGHTER) I'm serious, and
|
|||
|
you can plan out the entire scene.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREENWALD: In short, if you haven't seen it, you owe it to yourself. It's
|
|||
|
called The Theatre Game.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
STEVE GREENFIELD: I'm Steve Greenfield from Screenplay Systems. We've
|
|||
|
developed something called Scriptor. We've just released the Macintosh version
|
|||
|
with a full Mac interface. And it's actually a little bit more powerful than
|
|||
|
the our IBM version. We're also the developers of a program called Movie Magic
|
|||
|
which is a budgeting, schedule and breakdown program for the IBM PC. We hope
|
|||
|
that it will be available by late Spring.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Scriptor is for writing features, TV movies, and one hour dramatic shows, and
|
|||
|
shortly, theatre. We don't deal with left side, right side, but I can tell you
|
|||
|
the people from Microsoft are more than just listening, give them a chance and
|
|||
|
they'll probably come up with something you'll like.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
STEVE BECK: (of Beck Tech) I'm the guy who made page 73 of Macworld this month
|
|||
|
where they're showing our color Macintosh. I know in a room like this I can
|
|||
|
address video and television professionals who can appreciate not only are we
|
|||
|
getting color from the Macintosh, but we're converting to an NTSC broadcast
|
|||
|
standard signal. It's fully interlaid, fully equalized, all the widgets that
|
|||
|
let you take the signal from your Mac and mix it in with your production. So
|
|||
|
some of these products you've been describing effect what goes on BEHIND the
|
|||
|
screen but with our Chromatron, everything you see on the Mac is converted in
|
|||
|
real time to video. We also have a genlock overlay module coming out so you'll
|
|||
|
be able to genlock the Mac onto a videotape playback and then overlay Macintosh
|
|||
|
(key) graphics.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The other product we have is our MacMovies software animation package and it's
|
|||
|
a little different from a program like VideoWorks because this program does in
|
|||
|
fact let you playback full screens of Macintosh displays at rates of up to 30
|
|||
|
frames per second. We have a demonstration of Olivia Newton John singing on
|
|||
|
the Mac. At Siggraph people walked up and said, "Oh I didn't know the
|
|||
|
Macintosh had gray scale" or "What'd you do, put a little television set inside
|
|||
|
there?" No, what we've done is develop a tool kit for working with images on
|
|||
|
the Mac that is sort of like the Basic language. We have a picture interpreter
|
|||
|
so you can build a little movie with MacPaint or MacVision documents and see it
|
|||
|
run as you build it with the interpreter. Then when you get the movie the way
|
|||
|
you want it, you compile it with the Movie Compiler. Then you can put it on a
|
|||
|
release disc with a program called the Projector.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now all of this relies on a compression technique where we can squeeze as much
|
|||
|
as four megabytes of pictures down to five to seven hundred kilobytes and play
|
|||
|
them back. So with our 1 mg in the new Mac Plus or with our 2.5 Mg upgrade
|
|||
|
it's possible to put a full 30 second length movie in the Mac and play it back
|
|||
|
at full speed with color. So you're talking about roughly a 5 to 6000 dollar
|
|||
|
desktop color video animation tool based on the Mac and we think that's very
|
|||
|
important.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREENWALD: Those of us who've had to worry how to find the budget money for a
|
|||
|
$125,000 color graphics machine can appreciate the fact that something even
|
|||
|
EXISTS in the 5 to $7,000 range. It's nice to hear.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
JOHN WEYGANDT: I'm John Weygandt, college professor of theatre design at
|
|||
|
Pomona College in Clairmont, California. I'm using Business Filevision in my
|
|||
|
lighting design work. I find it amazing that Business Filevision thinks
|
|||
|
EXACTLY the way a lighting deisgner works. It makes a ground plan view of all
|
|||
|
the lighting instrument symbols, and then underneath that view, stores
|
|||
|
pertinent data. You can then pull out that data to make all sorts of lists
|
|||
|
about it: gel cutting schedule, dimmer hookup, instrument schedule, all that
|
|||
|
kind of stuff.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
That's exactly how Business Filevision works and I've developed a template that
|
|||
|
uses symbols. I've created a font called "Blocks" that has 125 different
|
|||
|
lights so that the light can be a front light, backlight, sidelight from either
|
|||
|
side. And just paste it right into the document, then format your gels,
|
|||
|
dimmers, all that stuff. For example, probably the most amazing one is my gel
|
|||
|
cutting schedule. When it's time to cut gels, it'll start with the lowest
|
|||
|
number, say, a Roscoe Lux 04. And it'll tell me the location: "Electric
|
|||
|
Number 1" and then say "Instrument Type: 6" Ellipsoidal" 5 cuts, then a 6 by
|
|||
|
12 ellipsoidal, 6 by 16, etc. And it'll total all those cuts at THAT LOCATION.
|
|||
|
Then it'll go on to the next location, say, "Electric Number 2" and then it'll
|
|||
|
go on to Roscoe Lux 05. So it's a great tool.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
JODY BARAM: I've created the Video Production Planner System. I've taken
|
|||
|
several different modules, a staff and equipment module to track your people
|
|||
|
and equipment. You can track them on a map or however you'd like to. I've
|
|||
|
also got a production module where you create electronic storyboards. And I
|
|||
|
just want to say that I can (inaudible) in columns.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I also have a Scheduler, a Studio Production Board, and also a live studio work
|
|||
|
scheduler including a calendar to keep track of all the activities and your
|
|||
|
coworkers. And I also have an edit lister which will keep track of shots to be
|
|||
|
edited and you can use that along with your storyboarding module to keep track
|
|||
|
of specific shots.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREENWALD: Indcidentally, one product that's useful but certainly not as
|
|||
|
elaborate as Jody's template is Daykeeper by Dreams of the Phoenix. It's a
|
|||
|
simple appointment calendar that can be easily modified to track your
|
|||
|
production schedule. It allows you to assign priorities. If you need a simple
|
|||
|
deadline list tied to a calendar, I've found that to be easy to update.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MICHAEL EDWARDS: I'm Michael Edwards and I've just released a line animation
|
|||
|
system called DYNAMO. Most of you are familiar with VideoWorks where you build
|
|||
|
a picture by MacPaint and build a number of these pictures and display them
|
|||
|
rapidly. This is how television works. Another way of doing it is to allow
|
|||
|
the entry of a structured piece of information with that picture and another
|
|||
|
structured picture, and then perform a mathematical interpolation to aid in the
|
|||
|
smooth transformation from one picture to the next. In real time so you get
|
|||
|
smooth motion. This reduces a lot of the work required because you only have
|
|||
|
to enter the initial data and not the later changes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By incorporating a structure inside the program, you basically build structures
|
|||
|
representing the body. So you want to move the upper torso for example, you
|
|||
|
move the chest and the whole upper body moves with it because it's all tied
|
|||
|
together mathematically. The product is a simple line drawing system that
|
|||
|
allows you to enter thousands of frames depending on the size of the memory and
|
|||
|
allows enter line drawings. It's a shareware product, and it's getting up
|
|||
|
slowly on the various bulletin boards. You can also buy a registered version.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN: I'm representing a friend from ABC Software. What he's come up with is a
|
|||
|
disk for MacPaint documents. 27 production forms basically just to provide
|
|||
|
well-designed breakdown sheets, casting information, commercial call sheets,
|
|||
|
daily production reports, deal memos, group releases, independant contractor
|
|||
|
invoices, petty cash, storyboards, minor releases, and much more. It's called
|
|||
|
Mac Movie Forms and all of them can be modified in MacPaint.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DANIEL SABSAY: My name is Daniel Sabsay and I'm a software engineer. I'm
|
|||
|
about to release a program called MacPrompter, which allows you to use the Mac
|
|||
|
itself or an external monitor as a teleprompter. We'll be increasing the
|
|||
|
product eventually so it can network and the display can be controlled, and the
|
|||
|
text edited, from another Macintosh. Right now it will only handle ASCII
|
|||
|
files. However, you have the ability to drop right into the middle of the
|
|||
|
document somewhere with the selection menus provided. So if you're speaking in
|
|||
|
an interactive way, and you're asked a question, you can jump to a portion of
|
|||
|
the prepared text that answers the question.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are several other features. You can adjust the scrolling speed as you
|
|||
|
read, and even record minute speed changes as you rehearse. MacPrompter will
|
|||
|
play back the text with all the same speed changes. You can go back through
|
|||
|
and modify any section of the script as you go.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I'd also like to mention a product by a company called Comtrex has a camera for
|
|||
|
$480.00. It's a very high resolution monchrome video camera. And it can look
|
|||
|
at any part of a Mac screen and it synchs automatically to the Mac's frame rate
|
|||
|
so you don't get a roll. And you point the camera at the Mac and it gives an
|
|||
|
NTSC video output with beautiful quality. It cleans up the signal. A
|
|||
|
marvelous little gadget.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREENWALD: (Repeats address for free disk) Please put your name and address on
|
|||
|
your disk label as well as your envelope. We're going to set up some Macs now
|
|||
|
to demonstrate some of the products you've just heard about. This ends the
|
|||
|
formal part of our presentation. I'd like to thank my fellow panelists for
|
|||
|
sharing their expertise. Thanks also to the developers who took time to be
|
|||
|
with us today. And of course, thanks to all of you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|