Archive for the ‘Avid’ category

DS v10

August 21, 2008

Avid showed off DS version 10 last night at an event at the Hollywood Roosevelt hotel. The new version boasts impressive speed and a new approach to processing based on the host computer and the GPU in the video card (an Nvidia FX 3700). In other words, no more Nitris. They were able to show 2K material with secondary color correction playing in real time with good responsiveness.

The package includes an 8-core Windows CPU with 8 Gigs of RAM, a single 30″ monitor and either 8 or 16 Terabytes of fast RAID 5 storage, for $50-60,000. Also included is a copy of DS software that can be run independently on a second CPU and a copy of Media Composer software, too.

The system relies on an off-the-shelf AJA card rather than Avid’s old Nitris box to handle I/O. And you no longer get Symphony when you buy DS. A lot of MC conforming works better with Symphony and that will apparently entail a separate purchase.

DS began life as a competitor to Media Composer, but when Avid bought Softimage in the late ’90s it had to morph into something that would complement it as a conforming engine that also offered high end visual effects capabilities. That’s never been a slam dunk because DS can’t fully recreate all Avid effects, and thus there’s been a continuing need for Symphony.

This latest DS showed very impressive performance and does it at a much lower price point than before. Avid is reaching out to customers in a way that most of its competitors cannot, and it’s offering a complete turnkey system with comprehensive support. In the environments where a product like this lives that’s critical. Details are here.

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First Look at Media Composer 3

June 17, 2008

Larry Jordan has posted an interesting and very positive first impression of Media Composer Version 3. Check it out on his new blog, HDFilmTools.

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Is the Suite Sweet?

June 16, 2008

One big question for the next phase of digital post production is whether developers ought to focus on building a suite, or whether an all-in-one application makes more sense. And the more I think about this subject, the less I understand it. Yes, there’s an obvious distinction between a big all-in-one program and a group of smaller, separate aps that do the same thing. But if you look at it more closely the edges blur.

Microsoft popularized the suite with Office, but even there it has rolled together functions that others deal with separately. Entourage integrates all the functionality of Apple’s separate Mail, Calendar and Address Book programs, and Word includes more and more desktop publishing functionality that used to be handled exclusively by Quark or Pagemaker. If you expand the definition enough, every application on your computer could be seen as part of a suite that is hosted by the operating system.

When it comes to digital media, Avid began life trying to roll as many functions as possible into a single app. Editing, visual effects and sound were all included. Final Cut started with that model, too. But now Apple offers Final Cut Suite, and Adobe offers CS3, with Audio, DVD and VFX tools. Avid now includes AvidFX, Sorenson Squeeze, SonicFire Pro and Avid DVD, though the last two only work on Windows. (For more about the Avid suite see Frank Capria’s recent post on the Source/Record blog.)

So is a suite better than a powerful all-in-one environment? The more I think about it the more this looks like the wrong question. The real issue is integration — how the different modules, whatever you call them, work together to produce a consistent, responsive environment that best supports the editor’s creativity.

Case in point: I just finished a show with Media Composer and did the titles with Apple Motion (details in this post). I enjoyed using Motion and loved all the things it let me do. But I had to do deal with two sets of media and two separate timelines, I had to do way too much importing and exporting, and I had to manage two different projects.

That’s a key issue — if the elements of your suite are working on the same data then they should all be accessible from the same timeline. Importing and exporting should be instantaneous and invisible.

Another key issue is look-and-feel. AvidFX looks like a much-improved way to do titles, and it works on MC data nicely. But it doesn’t look like the MC.

This points to one big advantage of a suite — not for editors but for software developers. It’s easier to create because you can buy the separate apps, put them in one box, and advertise a long list of capabilities. The key question for editors comes down not to what’s in the box, but how well the parts fit together.

However you package the tools, what I want in an editing environment is the same. I want a powerful editing application with great trimming tools (ie. MC) and great segment tools (ie. FCP), I want integrated titling and vfx in the main timeline with minimal rendering. I want professional 5.1 mixing and sound editing — again, in the same timeline. And I want the ability to make a basic DVD without creating a separate project to do so. I don’t want to have to conform sound elements to my own picture changes. And I don’t want to have to export and import to create titles or effects or simple DVDs.

Each of the three companies has succeeded with parts of this, but nobody does it all — yet.

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Version 3 is Out – Almost

June 13, 2008

On Monday, Avid officially released Media Composer Version 3, along with new hardware that finally does away with the firewire connection used by Adrenaline and Mojo. And yesterday many of us received emails saying the products were shipping.

Early reports indicate that the build is solid and feels significantly more responsive than previous versions, and I, for one, am very eager to get my hands on it. But there was one big catch. Media Composer on Macintosh isn’t qualified with Adrenaline or Mojo. Yes, the new version finally runs under Leopard, but due to a conflict between Leopard’s firewire code and the Adrenaline/Mojo firewire driver you risk crashing the OS using that hardware.

The bug hasn’t been seen in Tiger, but MC 3.0 hasn’t been qualified in Tiger. I know that our friends in Tewksbury have been working hard on this and, needless to say, they don’t have control over what Apple does. But I’m surprised that they didn’t qualify the new version under 10.4, something they are doing belatedly, now. There are people who will want to run Media Composer 3 without doing a full upgrade of the OS, and that should have been possible at release.

For more, see “important note 1” in the press release.

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Avid Product Management is Blogging

May 20, 2008

In a bow to a new corporate-wide focus on openness and transparency, Avid’s product management group for editing applications started a blog last week. Called “Source/Record,” the blog is the work of Tim Clamen and Greg Staten, who are doing terrific work building the new Media Composer.

There are only two posts so far, but it’s already interesting. Check it out here: Source/Record.

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Adrenaline RIP

April 15, 2008

Avid formally announced their new product line yesterday and the name “Adrenaline” was not part of the lineup. Mainstream “offline” editing will now be based on Media Composer software running the Mojo DX box, at a price point of $10,000 (CPU extra) with full HD support included. Editors will also be able to purchase the more powerful Nitris DX and use it with Media Composer software for $15,000 (CPU extra). Symphony/DS now costs $36,000 with the CPU included.

The new hardware intelligently uses all the CPU cores that you have, along with the processing power of your graphics card, and it connects to the CPU via PCIe, rather than Firewire. This adds up to what the company claims is the fastest and most stable Media Composer ever. MC moves to version 3.0 and will run under either OSX Leopard or Windows Vista.

The system handles many new file-based media formats natively and does not require rendering for DNXHD playout. Other announcements include a realtime burn-in effect, XML output via FilmScribe, and Metafuse, which helps turn DPX scan files into DNXHD media.

The details are in this press release.

Meanwhile, longtime Avid-l member Frank Capria announced that he will be joining Avid in May as product designer for Media Composer. Frank has been an outspoken and trenchant critic of the company and should bring plenty of new thinking to a reenergized Avid. Welcome aboard, Frank.

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