Modul8 and DMX

All Modul8 users are eagerly waiting for the next update that was promised for the first quarter of 2009. The Graragecube (the makers of Modul8) crew has said that they won’t bust out anything premature and rather wait until they have a stable release. However, I was emailing with a member of the crew who revealed that DMX support will be in the next release and you will need a ENTTEC usb to DMX interface to communicate with your DMX equipment. Modul8 will only support the ENTTEC drivers.

I’ll be continuing waiting eagerly… beachball2

A little bird also whispered in my ear that Garagecube is co-operating with the Austrian company VMS (Video Moving System) so that is going to be possible to control the mirrors of the Video Mirror Units straight from a Modul8 Module through DMX.

And the winners are…

winners2

The design agency Daquar received first price in the Motion Graphics category of the “Kolla! Grafisk design & illustration 2009” contest. Daquar won with a loop made for fLiM, the ambient and vj oriented club at Nordic Light Hotel.

Ben Cook from Radio Design, the british member of the swedish VJ Crew Instructions, received awards in The Best Audio Visual category and The Best Work of The Year in The RAD Awards (Recruitment Advertising Awards) for his animation commissioned by Work Communications. Check the award winning video here. It’s the “Josh’s video” that won the the awards.

Typographic film festival

Typophile is calling for entries to the 5th edition of their film festival. The deadline is March 31.

“The film festival is wide open to anything relevant to typography, design history, and/or type design.
It can be educational, experimental, inspiring or humorous.

Examples include (but are not limited to):
– Film Titling
– Promotional pieces showcasing a typeface
– Motion Picture Studio work
– Studio reels showing a strength in typography or motion type
– Experimental or animated fonts
– Documentaries
– Mockumentaries
– Short stories or animations
– Client work
– Student work”

Get the all the info here!

The battle of the codecs

There was an interesting discussion today regarding the Sheer video codec on the Modul8 forum where Dave from Vidvox (the creators of VDMX) and Bart from Resolume jumped in on the thread.

Sheer is a commercial codec that looks a bit better than Photo JPEG but results in slightly bigger files. Sheer also has support for alpha channel. The question is – is it worth $149?

Bart from Resolume was saying that the Sheer codec was not that great and accusing David from Vidvox of promoting the codec out of commercial reasons. David already denied any money being involved in his first post.

[Edit] This thread was started in 2005 so the initial posts are pretty old (like Daves and Barts comments), but the last posts with comparison of codecs is from a recent date. [/Edit]

In the same thread you could learn that you could swap the Animation codec for the more modern, faster, smaller PNG codec to get that nice alpha channel.

Read the whole thread here.

Some good news for Resolume users: Resolume has develeoped a new video codec called DXV toghter with The Pixel Addicts and UnitedVisualArtists. DXV is hardware accellerated and will decompress the frames using the video card’s GPU which is faster than using the computer’s CPU as conventional codecs does. This will result in the abillity to mix more video layers with higher resolution.

The codec is cross-platform and will work in all Quicktime enabled applications but the hardware accelleration will only be enabled in Resolume. And best of all, it’s for free. Read more and download the plugin on Resolumes home page.

Some new links

I’ve got some good links from VJ 2MCH this week and stumbled over some good ones myself. I think most of them also made it to the links page but it’s worth giving these a bit of extra attention.

  • VJ Kung Fu – Has a loot of good VJ related tech tutorials
  • vj.tv – A video blog about VJing
  • Super 2009 – Very good video mapping by french group Superbien.
  • MixEmergency – A new and simple VJ program for OSX. It has good support for Quartz Composer.
  • Old School VJs – 2MCH found this good old clip from swedish television. It’s about a computer party in the 80’s.

SwarmCam

For for a few years, I’ve been a part of a research project that is driven by Arvid Engström at the Interactive Institute / Mobile  Life Centre, in Stockholm. I’ve written about this project here earlier.
Arvid has been researching around a VJ application using video streams from mobile phone cameras over the HSPA net (commonly known as ”Turbo 3G”). There can be many contributors (cameras) and one VJ that will decide what is being broadcasted. The VJ can give feedback to the people filming by showing that they are ”on air”, vibrate their phones for attention or send messages. The application goes under the name ”SwarmCam” for the time being.

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The opensource software Movino is used to receive video over the HSPA-net and Max/MSP is used to mix the video sources and present the final output. In this case these softwares are run on a Macbook Pro. The software that must be present in the mobile phones to be able to connect to SwarmCam is written for Symbian. Unfortunately there are just few phones where user are allowed to install their own software.
The HSPA-net unfortunately has pretty big limits in upload speeds in it’s current state, which results in a pretty pixelated video quality. But with future cellphone nets we will be able to have much better video quality.

swarmcam_output

When I was testing the application for the first time with my DJ colleague, Henrik Berggren, the user interface wasn’t quite done yet. It was merely smacked together the night before. Even if this early version left a lot to wish for, one could clearly see it’s potential. The main functionality could be summed up like this:

  • Crossfader between source A/B and hard cuts between A/B.
  • Crossfader between B/C where C is pre made clips from the media bank.
  • Tempo control for clips from the media bank.
  • Media bank for pre made clips (that can be mixed with the live streams) and loops from the loop editor.
  • Image controls for source A/B.
  • The loop editor.

What impressed me the most of all these functions was the loop editor. The app will always buffer a few seconds of video. When you see something in a live stream that you want to record, just hit ”rec” and the recording will start a few seconds back in time (using the buffer). In that way you won’t miss the beginning of the action. The start and end of the recorded sequence can then be trimmed and saved as a loop in the media bank. This method of recording starting back in time is very smart and I haven’t seen it either in video or audio applications ever before.
On march 4 me and Henrik will demo SwarmCam when Mobile Life hosts an open house evening at the Interactive Institute. I’m hoping for a few additions like blend modes and MIDI-mapping that Arvid promised to build if there was enough time left.