Category Archives: Advices

A source for information from the Societies and consultants…

Digital Process Workflow at Createasphere

Digital Process Workflow Lab To Simulate Leading Real-World Post Production Strategies for Both Film and Television

Partners Bring Clarity, Cohesion to First-of-its-kind Pavilion at Createasphere’s Fall Entertainment Technology Expo

BURBANK, CA (August 14, 2012)   Three months before its scheduled launch, Createasphere and its partners have announced further developments in the content of the first-ever Digital Process Workflow (DPW) Lab at the fall edition of the Entertainment Technology Expo (ETE) being held at the Burbank Marriott, November 7-8. The DPW Lab is a curated, walk-through demonstration of the digital workflow ecosystem and the processes that define how content is created, distributed and archived today and in the near future. As both the feature film and broadcast industries continue to adopt new digital technologies, many production professionals are looking for guidance. The DPW Lab will demonstrate customizable strategies that are scalable and affordable, based on real-world solutions that Lab partners are integrating and creating every day in post.

DPW Lab partners – including Dell, ARRI, Technicolor, Adobe, 5th Kind, FilmLight, Signiant, Levels Beyond, Quantum, Codex and other leading solution providers – are working together to develop a demonstration of file-based content creation from capture to archive and distribution. Each company will contribute its authoritative expertise to an integrated pavilion that showcases today’s best-in-class digital workflow. The ultimate goal of the Lab is for attendees to leave with a “big-picture” understanding of how decisions at every stage of production and post production impact the quality of content generation, and how that content can be accessed and monetized for the future.

Interactive, educational sections of the DPW Lab will break down each step of the digital processes for feature film and television content creation. A simulated workflow will explore where post begins, how decision-making impacts each stage of the process, and how content is created with real-world solutions in mind. Areas of focus will include:

  • Capture – from camera, on-set dailies management, data capture, and file movement
  • Post – integration of editing, visual effects, finishing and color grading to deliverables
  • Storage – hardware, networking, digital asset management (DAM), and media asset management (MAM)
  • Security – addressing high level protection and performance
  • Distribution – global connectivity
  • Exhibition – cinema and home
  • Mobile – extending the story to second screen experiences
  • Archiving/preservation – accessibility, usability and monetization of content

“We are extremely proud to showcase our media and entertainment solutions in Createasphere’s Digital Process Workflow Lab this year,” said Laurie Hutto-Hill, general manager for Dell Telecommunications, Media & Entertainment. “The industry’s recent digital transition has created a need for consolidated hardware, unified workflow processes and intelligent storage and archive systems, and we’re thrilled to be able to demonstrate our ability to support these new digital models at the show this year.”

Industry alliances, keynote speakers and the availability of a downloadable guide and map for the Lab will be announced soon. For more information, visit http://www.createasphere.com/dpwlab.

About Createasphere
Createasphere is the premier business development partner for technology enabled entertainment, marketing, and communications organizations. We advance careers and technologies by connecting world-class professionals globally online and in person.

Createasphere was founded in 2001, and over the past decade has grown into a global company that in 2011 produced seventeen events over three continents as well as five websites. Createasphere became part of Diversified Business Communications in 2008, and now drives their entertainment, media, technology strategies and properties division. Currently, Createasphere produces the Entertainment Technology Expos in Los Angeles; the Digital Asset Management Conference in New York, Los Angeles, and Europe; The DAMMY Awards in New York; the Executive Marketplaces for Houses of Worship in Los Angeles and Chicago; Post Production Master Classes in New York and Los Angeles, the Digital Process Workflow Lab and the online news and content portals ProVideoCoalition.com, DamCoalition.com and ProPhotoCoalition.com.

Connect with Createasphere on:
Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/pages/createasphere/120410987973181)
Twitter (https://twitter.com/createasphere)
LinkedIn (http://www.linkedin.com/company/createasphere)
Vimeo (http://vimeo.com/createasphere)
Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=createasphere&f=hp)

Higgs!…and other summer distractions

24 July – Yellow Jacket iPhone stun gun case — Indiegogo – One wonders if you can get some extra time from the stun battery?

 

23 July – Maximum PC | White Paper: OLED Screens; Lot of data about something that could have been years ago, but which is quickly going to be happening…

4 July – All United States will mass together and explode fireworks today, as Higgs has been found. (Most didn’t know she was lost.)

For music fun today: 100 Riffs (A Brief History of Rock and Roll

OK, for explaining Higgs: What is the Higgs boson? – video | Science | guardian.co.uk

I don’t see it anywhere, but I understand that this field…these particles in this Higgs Field were described in an article written a couple decades ago for some Time or Newsweek like magazine. The scientist called the article something along the lines of “Searching for that God Damn Particle”. The editor, fearing the wrath of mouth-breathers everywhere renamed it “The Search for the God Particle”

1 July – The father of wife Frederique, Bernard Peiffer, has had a 2 album set released…great tunes:

Improvision: Bernard Peiffer: Amazon.fr: Improvisions

Fredy’s father played with the greats, from Django to Torme and dozens of others in between including solo at Carnegie Hall.

22 June – What is OLED TV? | TV and Home Theater – CNET Reviews – hat tip Mark Schubin

Is Condition One the future of video? Mark Cuban thinks so – hat tip Mark Schubin

27 May – Staples eReader interactive infographic – Doesn’t sound as fun as it is; tests your reading skills.

22 May – Rachele Gilmore’s 100 MPH Fastball – Andy Ihnatko’s Celestial Waste of Bandwidth (BETA)

20 May – 99% Invisible-50- DeafSpace by Roman Mars

17 May – 700 Opening Traps – Bill Wall from Bill Wall Chess Resources

16 May

The Second Circuit Reverses Conviction of Computer Programmer and Holds that Theft of Intellectual Property Is Not Necessarily Criminal – Hat tip to: 1st Joe Wojdacz | Disruptive Innovationist

JD Supra Buzz! — Can an API Be Copyrighted?

Inventors Should File Patent Applications As Soon As Possible | Fox Rothschild – JDSupra

 

What is Missing?

Classic Think Different

Think Different’s The Crazy Ones

{youtube width=”600″ height=”360″}8rwsuXHA7RA{/youtube}

The campaign was made almost entirely in-house by the team at TBWA Chiat/Day, Los Angeles:

Lee Clow, Chairman and Chief Creative Officer Worldwide, Account Director

Creative Directors: Ken Segall, Rob Siltanen, Eric Grunbaum, Amy Moorman.

Jennifer Golub, Executive Producer & Director, Art Director

Art directors: Jessica Schulman, Margaret Midgett, Ken Younglieb, Bob Kuperman, Yvonne Smith, Susan Alinsangan.

Copywriter: Craig Tanimoto.

Dan Bootzin, Senior Editor of the in-house arm, Venice Beach Editorial.

Stock Photo and Film research was carried out by Susan Nickerson, owner and head stock-footage researcher with Nickerson Research.

In 1998 the television spot won the second annual primetime Emmy Award for best commercial from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (ATAS). The ad also won a Belding, a Silver Lion at Cannes. The long term campaign won an Effie award for marketing effectiveness.

Stephanie Clarkson has had a desktop image page based on the ad, since it aired in 1997. She gives biographical details for each of the people featured in “Think Different #1”. Think different: Desktop Pictures (The last picture is un-noted, but she is the daughter of director Tarsem Singh, who is the featured bicycle rider on the Deep Forest Sweet Lullaby video.)

Richard Dreyfuss reads the voiceover in the most well known version:

Here’s to the Crazy Ones.

The misfits.

The rebels.

The troublemakers.

The round pegs in the square holes.

The ones who see things differently.

They’re not fond of rules.

And they have no respect for the status quo.

You can quote them, disagree with them, disbelieve them, glorify or vilify them.

About the only thing that you can’t do, is ignore them.

Because they change things.

They invent. They imagine. They heal.

They explore. They create. They inspire.

They push the human race forward.

Maybe they have to be crazy.

How else can you stare at an empty canvas and see a work of art?

Or, sit in silence and hear a song that hasn’t been written?

Or, gaze at a red planet and see a laboratory on wheels?

We make tools for these kinds of people.

While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.

Because the ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world, are the ones who do.

Think Different #1 featured the following footage:

Albert Einstein, smoking a pipe

Bob Dylan, moving to his harmonica

Martin Luther King, at the end of his Washington speech

Richard Branson, shaking champagne

John Lennon and Yoko Ono singing

Buckminster Fuller demonstrating the Bucky Ball

Thomas Edison thinking

Mohammed Ali dancing for the press

Ted Turner boxing the air with a smile

Maria Callas blowing a kiss

Mahatma Gandhi smiling

Amelia Earhart arriving

Alfred Hitchcock speaking

Martha Graham dancing

Jim Henson puppeteering

Frank Lloyd Wright walking by his home

Picasso painting

A child dreaming

A bit of the background

Steve Jobs had just returned to the struggling company, Apple. Jobs and Lee Clow had collaborated back in 1984 to launch the MacIntosh.

Now was the time to recover the sene of Apple’s place in the world of creative users. The TBWA Chiat/Day team said that Apple should be aligned with the creativity of personalities and people making an impact on the twentieth century. The “Think Different” phrase provided an opportunity to celebrate both the creativity of these people but also the distinctiveness of Apple in the computing world, responding to IBM’s historic campaign motto, “Think”. The campaign was swiftly approved by Apple, then begun with the television commercial, which first ran on Sept. 28 1997, followed by the print ads, billboards and posters.

According to the extinct site: http://tvadverts.blogspot.com/2005/10/apple-think-different.html

Higgs!…and other summer distractions

24 July – Yellow Jacket iPhone stun gun case — Indiegogo – One wonders if you can get some extra time from the stun battery?

 

23 July – Maximum PC | White Paper: OLED Screens; Lot of data about something that could have been years ago, but which is quickly going to be happening…

4 July – All United States will mass together and explode fireworks today, as Higgs has been found. (Most didn’t know she was lost.)

For music fun today: 100 Riffs (A Brief History of Rock and Roll

OK, for explaining Higgs: What is the Higgs boson? – video | Science | guardian.co.uk

I don’t see it anywhere, but I understand that this field…these particles in this Higgs Field were described in an article written a couple decades ago for some Time or Newsweek like magazine. The scientist called the article something along the lines of “Searching for that God Damn Particle”. The editor, fearing the wrath of mouth-breathers everywhere renamed it “The Search for the God Particle”

1 July – The father of wife Frederique, Bernard Peiffer, has had a 2 album set released…great tunes:

Improvision: Bernard Peiffer: Amazon.fr: Improvisions

Fredy’s father played with the greats, from Django to Torme and dozens of others in between including solo at Carnegie Hall.

22 June – What is OLED TV? | TV and Home Theater – CNET Reviews – hat tip Mark Schubin

Is Condition One the future of video? Mark Cuban thinks so – hat tip Mark Schubin

27 May – Staples eReader interactive infographic – Doesn’t sound as fun as it is; tests your reading skills.

22 May – Rachele Gilmore’s 100 MPH Fastball – Andy Ihnatko’s Celestial Waste of Bandwidth (BETA)

20 May – 99% Invisible-50- DeafSpace by Roman Mars

17 May – 700 Opening Traps – Bill Wall from Bill Wall Chess Resources

16 May

The Second Circuit Reverses Conviction of Computer Programmer and Holds that Theft of Intellectual Property Is Not Necessarily Criminal – Hat tip to: 1st Joe Wojdacz | Disruptive Innovationist

JD Supra Buzz! — Can an API Be Copyrighted?

Inventors Should File Patent Applications As Soon As Possible | Fox Rothschild – JDSupra

 

What is Missing?

Classic Think Different

Think Different’s The Crazy Ones

{youtube width=”600″ height=”360″}8rwsuXHA7RA{/youtube}

The campaign was made almost entirely in-house by the team at TBWA Chiat/Day, Los Angeles:

Lee Clow, Chairman and Chief Creative Officer Worldwide, Account Director

Creative Directors: Ken Segall, Rob Siltanen, Eric Grunbaum, Amy Moorman.

Jennifer Golub, Executive Producer & Director, Art Director

Art directors: Jessica Schulman, Margaret Midgett, Ken Younglieb, Bob Kuperman, Yvonne Smith, Susan Alinsangan.

Copywriter: Craig Tanimoto.

Dan Bootzin, Senior Editor of the in-house arm, Venice Beach Editorial.

Stock Photo and Film research was carried out by Susan Nickerson, owner and head stock-footage researcher with Nickerson Research.

In 1998 the television spot won the second annual primetime Emmy Award for best commercial from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (ATAS). The ad also won a Belding, a Silver Lion at Cannes. The long term campaign won an Effie award for marketing effectiveness.

Stephanie Clarkson has had a desktop image page based on the ad, since it aired in 1997. She gives biographical details for each of the people featured in “Think Different #1”. Think different: Desktop Pictures (The last picture is un-noted, but she is the daughter of director Tarsem Singh, who is the featured bicycle rider on the Deep Forest Sweet Lullaby video.)

Richard Dreyfuss reads the voiceover in the most well known version:

Here’s to the Crazy Ones.

The misfits.

The rebels.

The troublemakers.

The round pegs in the square holes.

The ones who see things differently.

They’re not fond of rules.

And they have no respect for the status quo.

You can quote them, disagree with them, disbelieve them, glorify or vilify them.

About the only thing that you can’t do, is ignore them.

Because they change things.

They invent. They imagine. They heal.

They explore. They create. They inspire.

They push the human race forward.

Maybe they have to be crazy.

How else can you stare at an empty canvas and see a work of art?

Or, sit in silence and hear a song that hasn’t been written?

Or, gaze at a red planet and see a laboratory on wheels?

We make tools for these kinds of people.

While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.

Because the ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world, are the ones who do.

Think Different #1 featured the following footage:

Albert Einstein, smoking a pipe

Bob Dylan, moving to his harmonica

Martin Luther King, at the end of his Washington speech

Richard Branson, shaking champagne

John Lennon and Yoko Ono singing

Buckminster Fuller demonstrating the Bucky Ball

Thomas Edison thinking

Mohammed Ali dancing for the press

Ted Turner boxing the air with a smile

Maria Callas blowing a kiss

Mahatma Gandhi smiling

Amelia Earhart arriving

Alfred Hitchcock speaking

Martha Graham dancing

Jim Henson puppeteering

Frank Lloyd Wright walking by his home

Picasso painting

A child dreaming

A bit of the background

Steve Jobs had just returned to the struggling company, Apple. Jobs and Lee Clow had collaborated back in 1984 to launch the MacIntosh.

Now was the time to recover the sene of Apple’s place in the world of creative users. The TBWA Chiat/Day team said that Apple should be aligned with the creativity of personalities and people making an impact on the twentieth century. The “Think Different” phrase provided an opportunity to celebrate both the creativity of these people but also the distinctiveness of Apple in the computing world, responding to IBM’s historic campaign motto, “Think”. The campaign was swiftly approved by Apple, then begun with the television commercial, which first ran on Sept. 28 1997, followed by the print ads, billboards and posters.

According to the extinct site: http://tvadverts.blogspot.com/2005/10/apple-think-different.html

SSL Certificates

This article is the beginnings of an article about SSL Certificates, what they look like, what they do, and what you should know so as not to be fooled.

The objective is pretty simple: To make it easy for the user’s computer to send and receive information from a site in a closed and secure environment.

Once a few steps are checked, the user can be assured that the data they are sending and receiving from the site is not going to be intercepted and mis-used. Most of the work is done by the “to be trusted” site, and one of a handful of 3rd party groups called Certificate Authorities (CA).

Now, in the digital cinema business the term certificate authorities comes up when speaking of the interchange of data between media server components and projector components. There are passwords (in the form of encrypted public and private keys) and encrypted data flying back and forth, and all refereed by CAs who follow rules set by a standards group or three.

The same is true in the web space, where keys are sent back and forth according to strict protocols. The user does’ t suspect any of this unless and until there is a gross problem. Usually the browser (Firefox, Safari, Chrome) notices certain clues that the sending site sends out, and if the browser doesn’t get more of what it needs for safe browsing it will either refuse to work or if it isn’t completely suspicious, it will tell the user the problem and ask the user for permission to continue.

Of course, absolutes don’t seem to exist…

SSL Certificate Explained – YouTube

{youtube}SJJmoDZ3il8{/youtube}

On the DCinemaCompliance.net demo site, there is a certificate from one of the major CAs named Comodo. They are major enough that Firefox and Chrome and Safari recognize them. If we got all our friends together to set up a certificate authority, we could do so but the browsers would throw up an error…probably each time. The user would have to grant authority.

cert on dcinemacompliance.net siteThe picture of a cert as on the DCinemaCompliance site might look cool and official, but it means nothing significant. It might remind you to look at the URL and see if it has one important feature: did the “http:” change to “https:”. A site that doesn’t have that ‘s’ wouldn’t be secure.

What an https:// url should look like

You will notice that the URL is also colored green. It could also have a green or blue bar behind it, depending on which level of certificate was purchased from the CA. In this case the ‘s’ is showing so that indicates that a secure communication line has been created for the data to pass through. Without the bars behind it indicates that there is some material on the page that may not be completely secure, for example if there is a link to a non-secure site.

One should still be careful that there isn’t any of those famous key stroke stealing pieces of malware that can get whatever data you punch in. But that is the background of SSL.

The following two pictures show what happens when hitting the lock on a site with a valid certificate, and the identical site incorrectly using the same certificate…valid in one place and not another. Note that it will get goofy with questions if there is no means of qualification with a widely acknowledged certificate authority. There are private certs, but your browser will tell you and give you a chance to make your mind up about accepting them or not.

A Cert Validates Correctly

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 


 

Part II will deal with how this is important to you as a user of the DCinema Compliance Post-Installation.

SSL Certificates

This article is the beginnings of an article about SSL Certificates, what they look like, what they do, and what you should know so as not to be fooled.

The objective is pretty simple: To make it easy for the user’s computer to send and receive information from a site in a closed and secure environment.

Once a few steps are checked, the user can be assured that the data they are sending and receiving from the site is not going to be intercepted and mis-used. Most of the work is done by the “to be trusted” site, and one of a handful of 3rd party groups called Certificate Authorities (CA).

Now, in the digital cinema business the term certificate authorities comes up when speaking of the interchange of data between media server components and projector components. There are passwords (in the form of encrypted public and private keys) and encrypted data flying back and forth, and all refereed by CAs who follow rules set by a standards group or three.

The same is true in the web space, where keys are sent back and forth according to strict protocols. The user does’ t suspect any of this unless and until there is a gross problem. Usually the browser (Firefox, Safari, Chrome) notices certain clues that the sending site sends out, and if the browser doesn’t get more of what it needs for safe browsing it will either refuse to work or if it isn’t completely suspicious, it will tell the user the problem and ask the user for permission to continue.

Of course, absolutes don’t seem to exist…

SSL Certificate Explained – YouTube

{youtube}SJJmoDZ3il8{/youtube}

On the DCinemaCompliance.net demo site, there is a certificate from one of the major CAs named Comodo. They are major enough that Firefox and Chrome and Safari recognize them. If we got all our friends together to set up a certificate authority, we could do so but the browsers would throw up an error…probably each time. The user would have to grant authority.

cert on dcinemacompliance.net siteThe picture of a cert as on the DCinemaCompliance site might look cool and official, but it means nothing significant. It might remind you to look at the URL and see if it has one important feature: did the “http:” change to “https:”. A site that doesn’t have that ‘s’ wouldn’t be secure.

What an https:// url should look like

You will notice that the URL is also colored green. It could also have a green or blue bar behind it, depending on which level of certificate was purchased from the CA. In this case the ‘s’ is showing so that indicates that a secure communication line has been created for the data to pass through. Without the bars behind it indicates that there is some material on the page that may not be completely secure, for example if there is a link to a non-secure site.

One should still be careful that there isn’t any of those famous key stroke stealing pieces of malware that can get whatever data you punch in. But that is the background of SSL.

The following two pictures show what happens when hitting the lock on a site with a valid certificate, and the identical site incorrectly using the same certificate…valid in one place and not another. Note that it will get goofy with questions if there is no means of qualification with a widely acknowledged certificate authority. There are private certs, but your browser will tell you and give you a chance to make your mind up about accepting them or not.

A Cert Validates Correctly

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 


 

Part II will deal with how this is important to you as a user of the DCinema Compliance Post-Installation.

IBC 2012 Tools and Tips

The 2nd issue that I noticed is that it doesn’t seem to be trustworthy yet. Besides being slow, it has wrong data. The first event that I checked – the EDCF D-Cinema Update Conference Event – shows correctly on 11 September, but doesn’t show the correct time. It shows 11AM instead of the 10AM time that the IBC site shows. It also doesn’t say where, which the online listing shows. [Room E102]

I very directly asked John Graham, General Secratary of the EDCF, about the rumor that I started which speculates that the Sunday 11AM conference on Future Projection Technologies will be all about Higgs Boson technologies and their application to Digital Cinema.

He says that he can’t announce anything in advance of the conferences.

Both the D-Cinema Update and the Future Projection Tech are free, and both are worth a fortune.

The Conference link is:

IBC2012 – Target specific areas of interest and build your own programme.


Flying into Schiphol Airport is usually pretty easy. Walking out of the customs area there are a couple rings of shops. In the past there has been an IBC welcome table where one can get their travel passes…but the travel pass is not good for the train to the RAI. The penalty for not having a ticket on the train is 35€.

There is also a bus to the RAI. I haven’t taken it and don’t know where the platform is. But the nice thing about the train is that for 3 euros it takes 10 minutes every time. Traffic can make a car or buss ride take 30 minutes.

One can go to the yellow kiosks to buy the train ticket…it isn’t obvious though…why not just select “R” and navigate to: RAI Station? Because the machine thinks of it as Amsterdam RAI…selected under the “A”.

Can you get a ticket with an out of country credit card. Sometimes, though sometimes I have seen people with English cards fail, and I have had problems with my French cards. Carry a few euros is the safe bet. And, definitely, American credit cards won’t work.


This will be an ongoing article with updates…there is still the announcements about the movies to come and most of the cool conference info is obscure…thanks be to the holy pizza that it doesn’t seem to be 3D HFR all the time.

IBC 2012 Tools and Tips

The 2nd issue that I noticed is that it doesn’t seem to be trustworthy yet. Besides being slow, it has wrong data. The first event that I checked – the EDCF D-Cinema Update Conference Event – shows correctly on 11 September, but doesn’t show the correct time. It shows 11AM instead of the 10AM time that the IBC site shows. It also doesn’t say where, which the online listing shows. [Room E102]

I very directly asked John Graham, General Secratary of the EDCF, about the rumor that I started which speculates that the Sunday 11AM conference on Future Projection Technologies will be all about Higgs Boson technologies and their application to Digital Cinema.

He says that he can’t announce anything in advance of the conferences.

Both the D-Cinema Update and the Future Projection Tech are free, and both are worth a fortune.

The Conference link is:

IBC2012 – Target specific areas of interest and build your own programme.


Flying into Schiphol Airport is usually pretty easy. Walking out of the customs area there are a couple rings of shops. In the past there has been an IBC welcome table where one can get their travel passes…but the travel pass is not good for the train to the RAI. The penalty for not having a ticket on the train is 35€.

There is also a bus to the RAI. I haven’t taken it and don’t know where the platform is. But the nice thing about the train is that for 3 euros it takes 10 minutes every time. Traffic can make a car or buss ride take 30 minutes.

One can go to the yellow kiosks to buy the train ticket…it isn’t obvious though…why not just select “R” and navigate to: RAI Station? Because the machine thinks of it as Amsterdam RAI…selected under the “A”.

Can you get a ticket with an out of country credit card. Sometimes, though sometimes I have seen people with English cards fail, and I have had problems with my French cards. Carry a few euros is the safe bet. And, definitely, American credit cards won’t work.


This will be an ongoing article with updates…there is still the announcements about the movies to come and most of the cool conference info is obscure…thanks be to the holy pizza that it doesn’t seem to be 3D HFR all the time.

Manice Goes English

They don’t seem to have an RSS feed yet, but when they do we will let you know, and add a stream to our new sources on the right side of the front page.

Ollivier Hillaire, publisher and editor of the sites, has great contacts in the field of digital cinema from the early days. It is good to see him continuing and expanding his success.

This comes on the heels of another EU DCinema news site converting its data to English, Frank de Neeve’s Cineserver | Digital Cinema Deciphered site from the Netherlands (or Pays Bas as long as we are in the French motif.)

The EU has many of the same, yet many different problems that can’t be solved in the same manner that integrators and exhibitors have done so in the US. Brining understanding to the client has a long-term goal of both of these respected entrepreneurs.

Manice Goes English

They don’t seem to have an RSS feed yet, but when they do we will let you know, and add a stream to our new sources on the right side of the front page.

Ollivier Hillaire, publisher and editor of the sites, has great contacts in the field of digital cinema from the early days. It is good to see him continuing and expanding his success.

This comes on the heels of another EU DCinema news site converting its data to English, Frank de Neeve’s Cineserver | Digital Cinema Deciphered site from the Netherlands (or Pays Bas as long as we are in the French motif.)

The EU has many of the same, yet many different problems that can’t be solved in the same manner that integrators and exhibitors have done so in the US. Brining understanding to the client has a long-term goal of both of these respected entrepreneurs.

[UPDATE] UNIC Crowdsources Innovation–Orange Involved

Perhaps this will change soon, but when it does it will have to be marketed, and marketed well. More new people are going to have to understand that something new and different is happening.

Along those lines the International Union of Cinemas has issued a request for ideas. A handful of ‘winners’ will get an expense paid visit to CineEurope in Barcelona and watch the ultimate winner receive a cash prize of 5,000€.  Attached is the press release.

This reminds one of the early days of digital. The cinemas who were able to promote to their potential audience were able to get crowds 3 to 5 times larger than their cross-town competition…and remember, these were the days of 1.3k chips!

Get on the thinking caps! 31 May is the final submission date.

 

The CineEurope Convention is being held this year (and for the first time) in Barcelone, Spain on Monday thru Thursday, 18-21 June. Click for CineEurope Schedule of Events

The winner of the UNIC competition will be announced at the:

Operating in a Digital World – Digital Innovation Award (Room 112, Level 1)

Mark de Quervain, Sales and Marketing Director, Vue Entertainment 
Jan Runge, CEO, UNIC
Pete Buckingham, Kube Consulting

Digitizing cinema screens is part of a wider revolution in the way people find out about film content.

Growth in smartphone use and tailored ‘apps’ offer huge potential for better engagement with the cinema-going audience.

This session will see the culmination of a competition which invited software developers and others to put forward proposals for a cinema-related ‘app’. After a judging process, dozens of entrants have been reduced to a shortlist of three, who will explain their application and how it would benefit the sector. The convention audience will then have a chance to vote on the winner.

[UPDATE] UNIC Crowdsources Innovation–Orange Involved

Perhaps this will change soon, but when it does it will have to be marketed, and marketed well. More new people are going to have to understand that something new and different is happening.

Along those lines the International Union of Cinemas has issued a request for ideas. A handful of ‘winners’ will get an expense paid visit to CineEurope in Barcelona and watch the ultimate winner receive a cash prize of 5,000€.  Attached is the press release.

This reminds one of the early days of digital. The cinemas who were able to promote to their potential audience were able to get crowds 3 to 5 times larger than their cross-town competition…and remember, these were the days of 1.3k chips!

Get on the thinking caps! 31 May is the final submission date.

 

The CineEurope Convention is being held this year (and for the first time) in Barcelone, Spain on Monday thru Thursday, 18-21 June. Click for CineEurope Schedule of Events

The winner of the UNIC competition will be announced at the:

Operating in a Digital World – Digital Innovation Award (Room 112, Level 1)

Mark de Quervain, Sales and Marketing Director, Vue Entertainment 
Jan Runge, CEO, UNIC
Pete Buckingham, Kube Consulting

Digitizing cinema screens is part of a wider revolution in the way people find out about film content.

Growth in smartphone use and tailored ‘apps’ offer huge potential for better engagement with the cinema-going audience.

This session will see the culmination of a competition which invited software developers and others to put forward proposals for a cinema-related ‘app’. After a judging process, dozens of entrants have been reduced to a shortlist of three, who will explain their application and how it would benefit the sector. The convention audience will then have a chance to vote on the winner.