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Tag Archives: Newtek

Jack of All Trades

There is something to working for UCONN’s Marine Sciences Center–it’s rarely the same thing twice.

Sure, there is the inevetible ghosting of an old system to recycle into a lab or for a grad student, but that gets done bit by bit in between other tasks…

  • Dry and wet testing cameras on an ROV for deployment
  • Interfacing computers to HPLC and CHN Analyzer systems
  • Taking pictures of the University’s newest research vessel, the R/V Lowell Wiecker, from the back of another boat being piloted by my boss who I swear was trying his best to chck my sea sickness resistance.
  • Creating a multimedia presentation for the dedication of the research vessel
  • working on an interactive guide map
  • A day taking texture photo’s of the campus

Still coming in the near future (this summer or early fall)

  • Building a beowolf cluster to replace an aging Sun cluster
  • hopefully adding a live switching and HD video editing system

Never boring that’s for sure, but the systems are a system admins nightmare, Linux, Windows and Macs..with every group and lab running a different network and hardware configuration because they each paid for and installed thier own systems from different vendors or whatever. I actually pulled a DEC 386 out of service today and replaced it with a PIII system. I haven’t seen a genuine DEC system in years. Of course the ones I knew were Alpha based workstations of the 90′s and the PDP-9, PDP-11 and VAX systems that I started this crazy journey working with back in the early 80′s. Crazy. Maybe I’ll find one of them “tucked” into a storage area in the basement….

TriCaster

Now this is just too cool! Newtek launched a new product at DEMO!

Newtek has announced TriCaster, a new product built off their VT[4] editing solution. It looks like it is a complete portable live video production, broadcasting and streaming tool. Like the VT[3] and VT[4] it is a switcher (up to 24 video sources!), video production suite, video editing (comparable to Final Cut and Avid), 3D and 2D graphics creation and editing, titler, color correction, genlock etc. all in one package. I have built and used their VT systems for some time now and have found it to be a wonderful system. The only current downside is that it is SD only still, but I believe the bandwidth is available on the second generation of the VT card for a software only upgrade to HD. Unfortunately I am still using the now two year old, but very capable, VT[3] with a first generation card. I have been a user of Newtek’s VT products since the first 0.9 version came out almost 6 years ago. I just don’t do enough video to warrant upgrading, although I still would really like to make that a major portion of my work. The new TriCaster basically appears to be an evolution of what some clients of Newtek have been doing for a while — build up an Athlon or Pentium system, with the VT card, maybe an audio mixing board and some wireless controllers/receivers, and put it all in a mobile rack enclosure. Add in a pair of LCD monitors and the actual video cameras and you have a highly capable portable event production center. It can easily plug into house audio and video sources and output to them as well. Great for live bands at clubs, seminars, keynote addresses or even outdoor events.

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The Empire That Was

There is an online exhibition at the Library of Congress called The Empire That Was Russia. It is an amazing exhibit of color photographs taken during the last decade of Tsarist Russia by Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii. They are images Prokudin-Gorskii took with his homemade (and designed) view camera. He used color filters to take three images in quick succession on a 3″ by 9″ strip of glass plate. Reminds me a bit of the fun of using my old DigiView from Newtek back in the late 80′s. For those not familiar with it, the DigiView was a digitizer for the Amiga computer, it connected to a black and white video camera. Rotating a color filter wheel through the Red, Blue and Green sections you could “scan” any picture (or for that matter any scene that stood still for 3 minutes) into the computer. Slow and tedious by todays standards, but for the time it was a breakthrough for digital artists and home use. In concept and even execution very much the same process as used a century before by Prokudin-Gorskii.

The LOC(Library Of Congress) has preserved the glass plates and other items from Prokudin-Gorskii’s estate. Now the original images have been digitally reproduced and can be seen much as when the photographer showed them through a custom three beam slide projector. Many of the subjects of the pictures will never be seen again, having been destroyed during one the various revolutions, world wars, etc. There are many beautiful churches, mosques and palaces represented in the Architecture . The Ethnic Diversity section is a wonderful sampling of some of the ethnic groups that comprised the Tsarist Russian Empire. Beautiful images. My favorites would have to be The emir of Bukhara and the View of the Nilova Monastery.

One of the best things about this exhibition is that this is how museum exhibits should be. While I would much rather be at the LOC and see these in person (when it was available there in 2001 that is), this online exhibition is wonderful, and allows at least a substantial and prolonged glimpse at what is offered by the in person exhibit at the LOC itself. It is accessible, educational, and entertaining. Hopefully more of the public museums will be moving forward with this type of exhibit.

The National Museum of the American Indian should have by now opened it’s doors — They actually, first among the Smithsonian museums, have it in their charter to make as much of the museum as possible accessible to long distance visitors. During late 2001 and 2002, I had a number of wonderful discussions with various people involved in the NMAI museum, it’s charter and development as a museum for the 21st century — video, web, imagery all connected and much of it available over the organizations Gigabit+ cabled network. Of all the SI(Smithsonian Institution) museums for a geek/artist to work, that would be it. I had hoped for some quite some time to work for the Smithsonian while I was still in D.C. Unfortunately for a variety of reasons — chief among them the extremely convoluted and drawn out hiring procedure — I never got the opportunity to make that happen.

Anyway, I came across the exhibit (I’m somewhat ashed to admit, as I used to visit LOC once every two weeks when I was looking at them for potential employment) via The Argus.

Stop SOPA

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