New DCinema 3D Solution Enters Market–TrioScopics3D

Recently, there was a presentation of the system at the 3D Industry Summit in Universal City. As reported in Variety: “TrioScopics3D President and CEO John Lowry premiered his 3D system, which requires no investment in equipment from exhibitors…”

What is required at the exhibition end?
•    A DCP* master created with the TrioScopic process  (*DCP=Digital Cinema Package)
•    Glasses from a TrioScopic licensee.

What isn’t required
•    Color wheels or electro-optical modulators.
•    Silver screen.
•    Polarizing lenses.
•    Left eye/right eye sequencing.

By definition, it is an anaglyph system, though just by looking at the glasses it is obviously different. (Anaglyph [from the Greek, to carve up – a method of encoding a three-dimensional image in a single picture by superimposing a pair of pictures.]

“I hate the word “anaglyph”, John says, “because it is associated with those horrible comic-book glasses, and bad effects. But there are other digital systems that are using anaglyph. During some research on another project, we decided that we could create and apply some interesting science to anaglyph.”

The system begins with a unique process during mastering. Instead of cyan/red lenses, it ends with a pair of glasses that have a lens pair of magenta and green, the hues of which, when combined, create white.

Hues of red and cyan can get close to white, but red has other problems in the human visual system. Red wavelengths create different focusing challenges for the eye/brain pair for example. Older systems have tried to fix the many problems by adding magnification into the red eye, and leaking red into both pictures to handle obvious reds like lipstick.

“Our hues of magenta/green are far more comfortable for long-term viewing. We have had 3 major movie studio releases to the home, plus other presentations. We have enough experience now to know that our system doesn’t cause headaches or other problems.

“It isn’t only the glasses; the precision of our processing creates a great image with a full range of colors and perfectly balanced luminance. This has evolved with each movie we have been involved in. We are quite proud of what we can do now.”

What about contracts or per movie royalties?

“We’re not going in that direction. We do make a royalty on the glasses, but it doesn’t greatly influence the price of those. We will know the quantity pricing for theatrical glasses very soon, but we know that they will be comparably inexpensive, and either recyclable or disposable.

“Up until now, the system has been used for Blu Ray releases on 3 major movies: Journey to the Center of the Earth, My Bloody Valentine, and Coraline. There is also a great clip that uses everything that we have learned to date called B.O.B.’S Big Break on the Monsters v Aliens disk.

“There are over 60 million sets of glasses in homes now, being used on all types of current televisions. Again, just like what we can propose to the studios and exhibitors, this doesn’t require anything more than the end user already has.

“This is a proven technology now, one that will continue to make a market that can help drive 3D all the way through the chain. It will help make theatrical release viable, it will help make 2D to 3D conversion of the studios libraries by groups such as InThree viable. The process even works well all the way down to movies on the iPhone.”

In the background of 3D and all things digital, there are several concepts that make the market unsettled. There is yet to be any system that has been through the DCI Compliance steps. The 3D standards are still a work in process. There are several 3D systems available, all of which are satisfying customers, but all of which are also in the process of being bettered. A new 3D system was recently proposed by Technicolor that works with film projectors, which, by the nature of its over/under technique, stabilizes several of the difficulties of prior film-based systems. So, one wonders, is this a stop-gap system, an interim system?

“Well, it depends on what you mean by interim. We think of interim as 5-10 years. We couldn’t tell you what might happen with technology out that far.

“But our system will work for exhibitors for as long as the current specs and DCP are around.”

Other answers:

  • Watermarking – Don’t anticipate a problems, but that is in test.
  • Macrovision? (now Rovi) – Have delivered 3 movies without problems.
  • Application with live events? We are moving on this now, with several interesting prospects to talk about soon. Our process is very fast, so we can offer an economical method of putting live 3D pictures on a stadium screen, into a theater and onto a high-def screen in the bar or home.

Questions not asked.

  • We were unable to get specifics on the technology (what is done).
  • What is the White Point chosen. What is the color space, and color depth.
  • What level of light hits the eyes.
  • Application with games? During a Lenny Lipton interview recently, he mentioned that his kids would be found playing 3D games with the glasses off. The speed hit and the faux color seemed to be worse than the distortion of watching the game in 3D.
  • Any association with DTS/Reliance?
  • Patented Process? or remain a proprietary process?
  • Prospect for simultaneous 2D and 3D system?
  • Extra bandwidth for 3D HD broadcast format?
  • European prospects/Opinions on subtitling

TrioScopics3D Site – A 3-D Distribution Solution for 3-D Entertainment

Apollo 11 moonwalk video restored by Lowry Digital

Same topic writen up well at Home Cinema Choice

John Lowry Bio
Co-Founder, TrioScopics 3D
John Lowry is an imaging visionary who has worked 57 years in the motion picture and television industry. Behind Lowry’s long history of image science breakthroughs is his resolutely unconventional approach to solving problems.

In the early 1970s, Lowry was a pioneer in designing digital video systems and tools. For the past 35 years, his primary focus has been the design and development of digital image processing systems to improve the quality of motion picture images. The Lowry Process™, a unique proprietary image processing technology that he developed, has been used to fine tune motion pictures like The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, as well as to restore hundreds of cinema classics including Citizen Kane, Rashomon and the James Bond and Disney Classics libraries.

Most recently, The Lowry Process was used to restore video images from the Apollo 11 moonwalk for NASA.

Today, Lowry is active with Lowry Digital, which he founded 11 years ago, and TrioScopics, the 3-D company he founded almost three years ago with Ian Caven.
TrioScopics has developed a 3-D system for distribution applications that, unlike other current 3-D techniques, does not require specialized players, projectors or display equipment, and utilizes inexpensive glasses with proprietary green-magenta filters.

Lowry holds numerous patents on motion image processing technology and is a Life Fellow of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers.

Device would zap pirate camcorders

The entire article in Variety is at:
Device would zap pirate camcorders –
Entertainment News, Technology News, Media – Variety

October 9, 2009 – By
MARK SCHILLING

[Editor: This has proved to be a difficult problem, and was spoken of at SMPTE Conferences several years ago. The trouble has to do with timing and the cleverness of being able to make the camera change when the pirates figure out that the standard doesn’t work.] The story continues…

Sharp aims to commercialize the technology within two or three years.

The Motion Picture Producers Assn. of Japan, or Eiren, estimates that pirates have trimmed 10%, or $220 million, off the $2.2 billion annual local B.O., while taking a similarly large chunk from the DVD biz. And pirates have been steadily improving …

Current Security Updates – 09/09

  • Critical: Vulnerability can be used to run attacker code and install software, requiring no user interaction beyond normal browsing.
  • High: Vulnerability can be used to gather sensitive data from sites in other windows or inject data or code into those sites, requiring no more than normal browsing actions.
  • Moderate: Vulnerabilities that would otherwise be High or Critical except they only work in uncommon non-default configurations or require the user to perform complicated and/or unlikely steps.
  • Low: Minor security vulnerabilities such as Denial of Service attacks, minor data leaks, or spoofs. (Undetectable spoofs of SSL indicia would have “High” impact because those are generally used to steal sensitive data intended for other sites.)

Fixed in Firefox 3.5.3
Critical: MFSA 2009-51 Chrome privilege escalation with FeedWriter
MFSA 2009-50 Location bar spoofing via tall line-height Unicode characters
Critical: MFSA 2009-49 TreeColumns dangling pointer vulnerability
Critical: MFSA 2009-47 Crashes with evidence of memory corruption (rv:1.9.1.3/1.9.0.14)

Fixed in Firefox 3.5.2
Critical: MFSA 2009-46 Chrome privilege escalation due to incorrectly cached wrapper
Critical: MFSA 2009-45 Crashes with evidence of memory corruption (rv:1.9.1.2/1.9.0.13)
MFSA 2009-44 Location bar and SSL indicator spoofing via window.open() on invalid URL
MFSA 2009-38 Data corruption with SOCKS5 reply containing DNS name longer than 15 characters

Fixed in Firefox 3.5.1
Critical: MFSA 2009-41 Corrupt JIT state after deep return from native function
Critical: MFSA 2009-35 Crash and remote code execution during Flash player unloading

Fixed in Firefox 3.5
Critical: MFSA 2009-43 Heap overflow in certificate regexp parsing
Critical: MFSA 2009-42 Compromise of SSL-protected communication
MFSA 2009-40 Multiple cross origin wrapper bypasses
Critical: MFSA 2009-39 setTimeout loses XPCNativeWrappers
Critical: MFSA 2009-37 Crash and remote code execution using watch and __defineSetter__ on SVG element
Critical: MFSA 2009-36 Heap/integer overflows in font glyph rendering libraries
Critical: MFSA 2009-34 Crashes with evidence of memory corruption (rv:1.9.1/1.9.0.12)

That’s a heap of Critical – Message is: Stay on top of Firefox. Stay on top of every freakin’ piece of software you have, for certainly, the blackhats are.


Nine patches for Microsoft’s next Patch Tuesday | IT PRO By Nicole Kobie, 7 Aug 2009 at 10:26

 

Microsoft will issue nine security patches next Tuesday, as part of its monthly patching cycle.

The majority affect various versions of Windows. Five are seen as critical by Microsoft, with the other three rated important. One critical patch also affects Client for Mac, while one of the important patches is for the .NET Framework.

The last bulletin is for a flaw in Microsoft Office’s Web Components, which was reported last month. The critical patch affects Microsoft Office, Visual Studio, ISA Server and BizTalk.

Paul Henry, security and forensic analyst at Lumension, said: “After a summer of heavier-than-normal Patch Tuesdays, the last thing IT workers need next Tuesday is yet another large batch of patches from Microsoft.”

He warned that anyone using Microsoft’s ISA server should pay attention to this patch. “One of Microsoft’s security products, Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) server, appears to have a hole that’s critical on all versions,” he said.

“Therefore, companies that are actively using this product as part of their security infrastructure will need to patch this vulnerability immediately.”

The patch will be delivered by autoupdate or be available to download on 11 August.

Microsoft issued a pair of out-of-band patches last week, to fix flaws in Internet Explorer and Visual Studio.

Apple updates Mac OS | IT PRO By Nicole Kobie, 6 Aug 2009 at 11:07

Apple has released the Mac OS X 10.5.8 update, patching a few issues in its Leopard operating system,  one month before the new 10.6 Snow is expected to be released.

Aside from general stability issues, the update fixes problems with joining AirPort networks, monitor resolution settings and Bluetooth reliability with peripheral devices like printers. The update also fixes an error which slowed startup time and another which affected imports of large movie or photo files.

The Mac OS X 10.5.8 update includes the latest version of Safari and all recent security patches.

 

GarageBand 5.1 puts lid back on cookie jar – News – The H Security: News and features 6 August 2009

Apple has released an update for its GarageBand application, addressing a security issue that could allow third parties or advertisers to track a user’s web activity. When a user opens the GarageBand application, it automatically changes Safari’s security preferences to always accept cookies, rather than the default setting of “Only from sites I visit”.

The change means that users may no longer be blocking any third-party cookies which advertisers can use to track their online activity.     [Read more data at H Security source material above.]

Naming trick opens mail servers – News – The H Security: News and features 6 August 2009

A number of Vietnamese spam sources are currently attracting attention because the spammers have equipped the relevant hosts with DNS pointer records called “localhost”. As a result, IP addresses like 123.27.3.81, 222.252.80.188 or 123.16.13.188 produce this name when a reverse look-up occurs. The problem is caused by badly configured Domain Name Systems, as “localhost” should generally translate to a single IP address – 127.0.0.1 …

Mail server operators must make sure they avoid falling victim to this trick. For example, they can make relays only available from local IP addresses and not identify clients by reverse look-up DNS names. Normal open relay tests don’t produce an alert in this case, because the test client usually isn’t called “localhost”. Several vulnerable mail servers have already been added to the iX blacklist. In addition to blacklisting, the operators of open relays potentially face having to pay damages to spam or malware recipients. [Read more data at H Security source material above.]

Firefox patches Black Hat SSL encryption vulnerability | IT PRO By Asavin Wattanajantra, 4 Aug 2009 at 11:23

Firefox has released version 3.5.2, a patch closing four critical vulnerabilities – one of which was a serious SSL encryption flaw discovered at the recent Black Hat conference in Las Vegas

The flaw is described in more detail here, but as Mozilla said in an advisory, it basically meant that attackers could have obtained certificates that could intercept and alter encrypted information between client and server, such as bank account transactions.

The other three vulnerabilities were also critical. This meant that attackers could have taken advantage by running code and installing software on a user’s computer even if they were just browsing normally.

[Story is severely edited…see the original.]

Latest Videos in Security

Video: Mobile security threats and Mac complacency Play Video: Mobile security threats and Mac complacency Play

Part two: Eugene Kaspersky, chief executive and founder of Kaspersky Lab, talks about the increasing security threats mobile users are facing.

QuickTime X walks before it runs

Read the entire article at:

MacUser: News: Analysis: QuickTime X walks before it runs

Analysis 2:30PM, Thursday 17th September 2009

By the time Apple came to develop video playing features for the iPhone, it was clear that the legacy QuickTime code wasn’t up to the job. That, together with Apple’s commitment to transition its applications to 64-bit Cocoa meant that something had to be done. So it took the engine it had built for the iPhone and used it to develop something new. That something was a complete, top-to-bottom re-write of the QuickTime framework. QuickTime X is not an upgrade to QuickTime 7, it’s a brand new framework and application.

The result is a video playback engine that exploits the capabilities of modern graphics processing units and, on a reasonably modern Mac, allows smooth-as-silk high-definition video playback. The downside, apart from the lack of editing features, is that QuickTime X plays a very limited range of codecs and there’s no support for plug-ins to add new ones. And if your Mac doesn’t have a modern graphics card, performance may even be worse than in QuickTime 7.

The good news is that QuickTime X is a beginning, not an end. Apple has taken a wise decision to focus on getting the basics right with QuickTime X and release it with limited features, rather than try and cram everything into what is essentially a 1.0 release. As with other applications, where the transition from Carbon to 64-bit Cocoa has been made without the addition of new features, Apple’s developers have been cautious but sensible.

We can only speculate about where QuickTime will go from here because Apple, in line with its stance of not commenting on unannounced products, won’t tell us. But it wouldn’t be too much of a stretch to imagine that future versions of QuickTime X, probably released along with updates to Mac OS X, will put back the missing features. So, in the next version, we might see support for plug-ins, and in the one after that, the return of the Properties window in Player, and along with it the ability to cut and paste sections from individual tracks. Although it’s unlikely that all the old features will return – for example, so much video is now shot on progressive scan video cameras that support for de-interlacing might be deemed unnecessary.

In the meantime, QuickTime 7 will be updated to ensure it remains stable and secure, and will remain a part of Mac OS X for some time to come. It’s not an ideal situation, but developing a modern API for playing back audio and video, with support for Mac OS X, the iPhone, and Windows was never going to be easy. Apple has made many transitions in recent years; from Mac OS 9 to Mac OS X, from PowerPC to Intel, and from 32-bit Carbon to 64-bit Cocoa, and it’s learned a great deal.

Perhaps the most important lessons are not to try and do everything at once and to maintain support for the outgoing tool – whether it be Mac OS 9 with Classic, PowerPC with Rosetta, or QuickTime 7, while the replacement finds its feet. Classic has long since disappeared from the standard Mac OS X installation, Rosetta followed suit with Snow Leopard, and eventually QuickTime 7 will follow them. By then, QuickTime X will be several generations old and we’ll have forgotten what all the fuss was about when it was introduced.

Kenny Hemphill

Fun With Numbers – Mojo

STAR WARS BOX OFFICE
Note: Click chart to toggle for inflation adjusted figures.

Obviously, a couple billion bucks and 4 billion bucks is a little bit different.

That series has 4 or the top 20 positions in the Adjusted Gross, then you have to go to number 84 to get all 6 in. I choose the Tickets Sold chart. You might like the Inflation Adjusted Dollars version. Apologies to the Box Office Mojo site if I took too much to make a point.

Rank Title (click to view) Studio Est. Tickets Unadjusted Gross Year^
1 Gone with the Wind MGM 202,044,600 $198,676,459 1939^
2 Star Wars Fox 178,119,600 $460,998,007 1977^
3 The Sound of Music Fox 142,415,400 $158,671,368 1965
4 E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial Uni. 141,854,300 $435,110,554 1982^
5 The Ten Commandments Par. 131,000,000 $65,500,000 1956
6 Titanic Par. 128,345,900 $600,788,188 1997
7 Jaws Uni. 128,078,800 $260,000,000 1975
8 Doctor Zhivago MGM 124,135,500 $111,721,910 1965
9 The Exorcist WB 110,568,700 $232,671,011 1973^
10 Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Dis. 109,000,000 $184,925,486 1937^
11 101 Dalmatians Dis. 99,917,300 $144,880,014 1961^
12 The Empire Strikes Back Fox 98,180,600 $290,475,067 1980^
13 Ben-Hur MGM 98,000,000 $74,000,000 1959
14 Return of the Jedi Fox 94,059,400 $309,306,177 1983^
15 The Sting Uni. 89,142,900 $156,000,000 1973
16 Raiders of the Lost Ark Par. 88,141,900 $242,374,454 1981^
17 Jurassic Park Uni. 86,205,800 $357,067,947 1993
18 The Graduate AVCO 85,571,400 $104,901,839 1967^
19 Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace Fox 84,825,800 $431,088,301 1999
20 Fantasia Dis. 83,043,500 $76,408,097 1941^
21 The Godfather Par. 78,922,600 $134,966,411 1972^
22 Forrest Gump Par. 78,545,600 $329,694,499 1994
23 Mary Poppins Dis. 78,181,800 $102,272,727 1964^
24 The Lion King BV 77,231,800 $328,541,776 1994^
25 Grease Par. 76,921,800 $188,389,888 1978^
26 Thunderball UA 74,800,000 $63,595,658 1965
27 The Dark Knight WB 74,282,100 $533,345,358 2008
28 The Jungle Book Dis. 73,679,900 $141,843,612 1967^
29 Sleeping Beauty Dis. 72,676,100 $51,600,000 1959^
30 Shrek 2 DW 71,050,900 $441,226,247 2004
31 Ghostbusters Col. 70,730,600 $238,632,124 1984^
32 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid Fox 70,557,900 $102,308,889 1969
33 Love Story Par. 69,998,100 $106,397,186 1970
34 Spider-Man Sony 69,484,700 $403,706,375 2002
35 Independence Day Fox 69,268,900 $306,169,268 1996
36 Home Alone Fox 67,734,200 $285,761,243 1990
37 Pinocchio Dis. 67,403,300 $84,254,167 1940^
38 Cleopatra (1963) Fox 67,183,500 $57,777,778 1963
39 Beverly Hills Cop Par. 67,150,000 $234,760,478 1984
40 Goldfinger UA 66,300,000 $51,081,062 1964
41 Airport Uni. 66,111,300 $100,489,151 1970
42 American Graffiti Uni. 65,714,300 $115,000,000 1973
43 The Robe Fox 65,454,500 $36,000,000 1953
44 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest BV 64,628,400 $423,315,812 2006
45 Around the World in 80 Days UA 64,615,400 $42,000,000 1956
46 Bambi RKO 63,712,400 $102,247,150 1942^
47 Blazing Saddles WB 63,227,500 $119,500,000 1974
48 Batman WB 62,954,600 $251,188,924 1989
49 The Bells of St. Mary’s RKO 62,745,100 $21,333,333 1945
50 The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King NL 61,538,100 $377,027,325 2003
51 The Towering Inferno Fox 61,375,700 $116,000,000 1974
52 Spider-Man 2 Sony 60,158,700 $373,585,825 2004
53 My Fair Lady WB 60,000,000 $72,000,000 1964
54 The Greatest Show on Earth Par. 60,000,000 $36,000,000 1952
55 National Lampoon’s Animal House Uni. 59,890,300 $141,600,000 1978^
56 The Passion of the Christ NM 59,704,800 $370,782,930 2004^
57 Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith Fox 59,324,600 $380,270,577 2005
58 Back to the Future Uni. 59,050,700 $210,609,762 1985
59 The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers NL 57,630,400 $341,786,758 2002^
60 The Sixth Sense BV 57,579,100 $293,506,292 1999
61 Superman WB 57,358,100 $134,218,018 1978
62 Tootsie Col. 56,903,900 $177,200,000 1982
63 Smokey and the Bandit Uni. 56,832,900 $126,737,428 1977
64 Finding Nemo BV 56,337,500 $339,714,978 2003
65 Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen P/DW 55,983,900 $401,964,397 2009
66 West Side Story MGM 55,970,300 $43,656,822 1961
67 Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone WB 55,913,000 $317,575,550 2001
68 Lady and the Tramp Dis. 55,734,900 $93,602,326 1955^
69 Close Encounters of the Third Kind Col. 55,575,500 $132,088,635 1977^
70 Lawrence of Arabia Col. 55,383,600 $44,824,144 1962^
71 The Rocky Horror Picture Show Fox 55,069,400 $112,892,319 1975
72 Rocky UA 55,040,000 $117,235,147 1976
73 The Best Years of Our Lives RKO 55,000,000 $23,650,000 1946
74 The Poseidon Adventure Fox 54,902,000 $84,563,118 1972
75 The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring NL 54,703,900 $314,776,170 2001^
76 Twister WB 54,688,100 $241,721,524 1996
77 Men in Black Sony 54,616,700 $250,690,539 1997
78 The Bridge on the River Kwai Col. 54,400,000 $27,200,000 1957
79 It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World MGM 53,875,400 $46,332,858 1963
80 Swiss Family Robinson Dis. 53,808,000 $40,356,000 1960
81 One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest UA 53,685,400 $108,981,275 1975
82 M.A.S.H. Fox 53,684,200 $81,600,000 1970
83 Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom Par. 53,532,800 $179,870,271 1984
84 Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones Fox 53,468,500 $310,676,740 2002^
85 Mrs. Doubtfire Fox 52,684,400 $219,195,243 1993
86 Aladdin BV 52,442,300 $217,350,219 1992

 

Pearls Before Breakfast – Washington Post

It was 7:51 a.m. on Friday, January 12, the middle of the morning rush hour. In the next 43 minutes, as the violinist performed six classical pieces, 1,097 people passed by. Almost all of them were on the way to work, which meant, for almost all of them, a government job. L’Enfant Plaza is at the nucleus of federal Washington, and these were mostly mid-level bureaucrats with those indeterminate, oddly fungible titles: policy analyst, project manager, budget officer, specialist, facilitator, consultant.

 

Catch this companion piece as well – It includes a link to Springsteen doing a similar thing in the EU.


Monday, April 9, 2007 1 p.m. ETPost Magazine: Too Busy to Stop and Hear the Music
Can one of the nation’s greatest musicians cut through the fog of a D.C. rush hour? Gene Weingarten set out to discover if violinist Josh Bell — and his Stradivarius — could stop busy commuters in their tracks.


Read the entire piece at:

Pearls Before Breakfast – washingtonpost.com

By Gene WeingartenWashington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 8, 2007; Page W10

 

Each passerby had a quick choice to make, one familiar to commuters …

On that Friday in January, those private questions would be answered in an unusually public way. …

The musician did not play popular tunes whose familiarity alone might have drawn interest. …

The acoustics proved surprisingly kind. Though the arcade is of utilitarian design, a buffer between the Metro escalator …

So, what do you think happened?

HANG ON, WE’LL GET YOU SOME EXPERT HELP.

Leonard Slatkin, music director of the National Symphony Orchestra, was asked the same question. What did he think would occur, hypothetically, if one of the world’s great violinists had performed incognito before a traveling rush-hour audience of 1,000-odd people?

“Let’s assume,” Slatkin said, “that he is not recognized and just taken for granted as a street musician . . . Still, I don’t think that if he’s really good, he’s going to go unnoticed. He’d get a larger audience in Europe . . . but, okay, out of 1,000 people, my guess is there might be 35 or 40 who will recognize the quality for what it is. Maybe 75 to 100 will stop and spend some time listening.”

So, a crowd would gather?

“Oh, yes.”

And how much will he make?

“About $150.”

Thanks, Maestro. As it happens, this is not hypothetical. It really happened.

“How’d I do?”

We’ll tell you in a minute.

“Well, who was the musician?”

Joshua Bell.

“NO!!!”

A onetime child prodigy, at 39 Joshua Bell has arrived as an internationally acclaimed virtuoso. Three days before he appeared at the Metro station, …

Bell was first pitched this idea shortly before Christmas, over coffee at a sandwich shop on Capitol Hill. A New Yorker, he was in town to perform at the Library of Congress…

“Here’s what I’m thinking,” Bell confided, as he sipped his coffee. “I’m thinking that I could do a tour where I’d play Kreisler’s music . . .”

He smiled.

“. . . on Kreisler’s violin.”

It was a snazzy, sequined idea — part inspiration and part gimmick — and it was typical of Bell, who has unapologetically embraced showmanship …

When Bell was asked if he’d be willing to don street clothes and perform at rush hour, he said:

“Uh, a stunt?”

Well, yes. A stunt. Would he think it . . . unseemly?

Bell drained his cup.

“Sounds like fun,” he said.

The article is long, but worth every minute…and be sure to block some time to read the accompanying piece referenced above.

Birth of a Myth: the restoration of HONDO – by Bob Furmanek and Jack Theakston

The following article will present these facts documented with interactive sources.


The entire article is reprinted with permission from:

Birth of a Myth: the restoration of HONDO – 3DFPF – 3-D Film Preservation Fund a tax exempt 501(c)3 non profit corporatione following article is an interactive article.  Sources are not cited with footnotes, but presented as hyperlinks. Each source will open as a JPG image when clicked on.  Exact date and periodical is listed in the title of the image (eg. MOTIONPICTUREEXHIBITOR_071454.jpg is from The Motion Picture Exhibitor, July 14, 1954).


Production Background

Searching for an alternative to draw audiences away from television in the early 1950s, studios and exhibitors alike put their efforts into realism and new cinematic techniques. In November of 1952, stereoscopic movies made a big splash at the box office. Arch Oboler’s African adventure BWANA DEVIL, despite being considered a mediocre film, opened to great acclaim and capacity crowds. The public’s interest was not with the content of the film, but what was going on in the theater: lions were leaping into the audience, and there was an added dimension to the screen– depth. Despite decades of experiments, short subjects and failed attempts at 3-D, BWANA DEVIL had finally brought to the public an economic system of depth-realism. Oboler’s production gained its notoriety from its use of the Natural Vision three-dimensional camera.   Natural Vision operated with two cameras, focused at angles and distances approximating two human eyes, and photographed the subject with two separate 35mm negatives. In projection, Polaroid filters were placed in front of two projectors running in precise synchronization and the left/right 35mm prints were projected onto a silver screen. Audience members wearing the special Polaroid glasses would then maintain an illusion of stereoscopic imagery in their sight.

Word spread around town instantly of Oboler’s financial success, and all of the major studios quickly went into production with their own 3-D films, either using the Natural Vision camera rig or devising their own.  The most successful of these films was Warner’s HOUSE OF WAX (April 1953), starring Vincent Price and also released in the WarnerPhonic stereophonic sound system.  Jack Warner, so impressed by the financial success of the film, announced a rigorous schedule of 22 films in 3-D, representing half of the studios upcoming shooting schedule.

The All Media Camera RigOn May 19, Jack Warner announced the new All-Media Camera, a camera designed to shoot in any format– black and white or color, 3-D and/or widescreen, or flat. The rig was designed and built by the studios camera department, and would be utilized for the first time on HONDO. Cinematographers Robert Burks and Archie Stout would be shooting on location, in 3-D and widescreen. Films shot with the All-Media rig were composed for the aspect ratio of 1.75:1 or 1.85:1.

Principal photography began in Camargo, Mexico on June 11. The picturesque landscape would provide the perfect visual setting, but the director and cinematographers had trouble adjusting to the new camera. On June 18, Jack Warner viewed three reels of dailies and was concerned about the lack of close-ups, especially in the scene where John Wayne first meets Geraldine Page. He sent a telegram to the Duke and said “Director is not moving you and Geraldine close enough to camera. Everything seems to be too far away. Must have usual over-shoulder close shots individuals and tight twos in three-dimensional pictures so we can see peoples expressions and everything else.” On June 20, John Wayne replied: “Farrow has done everything but play music to get camera in for close shots. Seems our lenses are matted for 1.75 or 1.8 screen, plus fact that cameraman is over cautious for fear front office will scream eyestrain. Will show cameraman your wire. Think it will do the trick. He is really working hard but has limited us in making shots because of his fear and reluctance to do a shot that might throw background lines too wide an angle.”

Jack Warner’s advice was taken, and Robert Burks starting moving the camera in tighter for close shots. However, over the next several weeks, the elements proved to be a major problem. The intense heat, dust, wind and rain caused multiple delays throughout shooting. As a result, there are several shots in HONDO that are flat, due to a malfunction with one of the cameras.

By the end of the summer of 1953, interest began to dwindle in 3-D, resulting in a quick decline of both productions and exhibitions.  Projectionists were finding it difficult to maintain synchronization between the two reels of film running during projection, a malfunction that would cause severe eye-strain and headaches for the audience. On September 16, 1953, 20th Century Fox premiered their anamorphic process CinemaScope with their production of THE ROBE. They wasted no time in advertising the new process as “the modern miracle you see without glasses.”

At the same time, several studios reversed their policy which had mandated that all 3-D movies must play their entire run of stereoscopic playdates before being available as a standard, flat film.  With the studios’ new attitude towards the exhibition format, most exhibitors opted to play the new 3-D releases flat. By November 1953, 3-D was considered poison at the box office.

But 3-D movies weren’t dead yet.  Due to newly developed technical advancements in projection techniques, the studios began a new campaign to bring back 3-D, with their ace being a new group of quality, high-budget 3-D films that would outshine the competition.  Among the Fall/Winter 1953 season’s titles were Columbia’s MISS SADIE THOMPSON with Rita Hayworth,  Paramount’s MONEY FROM HOME with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis as well as Hal Wallis’ timely Korean War docu-drama CEASE FIRE, RKO’s scandalous production of THE FRENCH LINE with Jane Russell, MGM’s film version of the Cole Porter musical, KISS ME KATE and Warner Bros.’ highly anticipated John Wayne western HONDO.

Metro Goldwyn Mayer decided to test public opinion: they would exhibit KISS ME KATE in six theaters. Three theaters would play the film flat, and the remaining three would show it in 3-D. The public’s reaction would dictate which version would go into wide release. The 3-D showings had a substantially better response and KISS ME KATE went into wide release in either format, but with the suggestion that showmen across the country play the stereoscopic version of its film. With the exception of Radio City Music Hall, most other engagements for KATE were in 3-D.

Hondo Ad InsertIt was into this uncertain climate which HONDO first went into release. Jack Warner and his studio had been a staunch advocate of 3-D, and wasted no time in promoting their forthcoming release. The first trade ads appeared on November 7, and the film was trade-screened for the press on November 16, 1953. The reaction was sensational. Critics unanimously praised the film, and its effective use of stereoscopic cinematography. Warner Bros. was so enthusiastic about the films dimensional qualities, they made sure to emphasize that fact in their trade ads. In order to satisfy theaters not equipped for 3-D, Warner Bros. stated that HONDO would also be available in its flat version.  With the official release date set for January, the studio assigned release #312 to the 3-D version, and  #349 to the 2-D version.

In an effort to ensure the highest quality presentations, the Polaroid Corporation (who obviously had a vested interest in the continued success of 3-D movies) developed and advertised new, comfortable plastic glasses and clip-ons as well as synchronization aids which would enable operators to quickly detect and remedy any out-of-sync 3-D presentation. Offered to theaters at a nominal cost, Polaroid did all they could to insure that the 3-D movie industry would last. They even took out special ads in local newspapers assuring the public that the 3-D to be seen in HONDO was better than anything they had seen before.

HONDO had its world premiere on November 24, 1953.  John Wayne and Ward Bond flew to Texas for the premiere in Houston, and then went to a second premiere on November 25 in El Paso. Warner Bros. announced a special group of pre-release playdates commencing on Thanksgiving Day, November 26, 1953, in thirty-five major cities, including Detroit, Atlanta, Boston, and Washington.  Any fear that 3-D would hurt the films box office potential was quickly diminished as HONDO did terrific business wherever it played, and was held-over for a second (and even for a third or fourth week) in most engagements. Jack Warner even placed an ad in both the Hollywood Reporter and Daily Variety boasting to his peers (and critics) about HONDO’s phenomenal success.

The studios publicity department went to work and sent View-Master preview reels to camera shops and movie theaters across the country.  The View-Master reel depicted seven scenes from the film, each in full color and stereoscopic 3-D.  National Screen service provided the cabinets in which the reel could be viewed, complete with a silk-screened, die-cut card on top of the cabinet. As part of their rigorous ad campaign, Warners arranged for a television contest to be broadcast on the CBS program, “The Big Payoff.”

Despite a city-wide newspaper strike wherein there was no advertising available, HONDO still managed to perform an amazing $55,000 during its first week engagement at the 3,664-seat Paramount Theater in New York. The film was held over for three weeks during this play date, and at the Paramount alone grossed $128,000 in ticket sales.  A smash hit on his hands, Jack Warner was quick to re-state his faith in the future of 3-D movies.

Hondo AdHONDO continued to pick up box office steam throughout December, where it opened in such major cities as St. Louis, Los Angeles, Cincinnati, Portland and Minneapolis.  In January, 1954, it opened in additional cities, including San Francisco, Chicago, Oakland, Denver, Seattle and Toronto.

3-D bookings maintained their popularity into February.  In New York alone, it opened on February 3, 1954 at 31 theaters in Manhattan, the Bronx and Westchester.  One week later, ten additional RKO-circuit houses in Brooklyn and Queens added stereoscopic showings.  This pattern of second-run and small-town dimensional bookings was typical of the widespread interest and success of HONDO.  Even many drive-ins, which because of technical reasons were not usually 3-D friendly, played the stereoscopic version of the film.

Despite Warner’s announcement that any exhibitor had the option to play the film flat, it is interesting to note that until February 1954, all known bookings of HONDO were stereoscopic in every engagement.  In fact, finding any flat bookings during this period proved difficult. One flat playdate was found at the sub-run booking of the 800-seat Belmont Theatre in Long Beach, CA, but only after having played two-weeks starting Christmas Day at the 1,800-seat State Theatre and the 1,200-seat Towne Theatre, both in 3-D.

March and April of 1954 found HONDO finally beginning to open at some small theaters and drive-ins which did not have the necessary equipment for stereoscopic exhibition, long after the 3-D version had played out its first-run engagements in that particular area.  Even so, bookings in 3-D could still be found in such towns as Charleston, West Virginia and Winnipeg, Manitoba.

HONDO’s 3-D success was not limited to the U.S.  On February 27, 1954, it opened to capacity crowds at London’s 1,734-seat Warner Theater, where it would play for five weeks and bring in over $40,000.  Nearly three months later, HONDO was still playing in 3-D in theaters throughout South London.

With an average price of 49-cents a ticket in 1954, HONDO finished up the year with an impressive domestic gross of $4,100,000, a very large percentage of those being stereoscopic playdates.  In 1954, HONDO was the 16th highest grossing film of the year, and the 106th top grossing film of all time. After Warner’s HOUSE OF WAX, which grossed an astonishing $6,500,000, it was the second highest grossing 3-D film of the 1950’s.

Restoration and Myth

In 1988, the late Michael Wayne, eldest son of John Wayne and head of Batjac Productions, took the film to Daniel Symmes. Both 3-D expert and historian, Mr. Symmes utilized the original left/right negatives to create a new 3-D version of HONDO for television (details about the history of the Wayne/Symmes restorations may be found in this informative article by Mr. Symmes himself). For technical reasons, instead of being presented in the polarized format, HONDO was converted to an anaglyph– the “red and blue” 3-D which many remembered from 3-D comic books in the 1950’s.

To promote the television premiere, Michael Wayne was interviewed in a June, 1991 Associated Press article. “When we started filming ‘Hondo’, 3-D was the rage. However, it takes a year to complete a film, and by that time, interest in 3-D had died down. So the film was only shown in 3-D in two theaters in the country for about a week. Fortunately, the film caught on without the 3-D and paid its negative cost in about eight weeks.” With all due respect to Mr. Wayne, he overlooked the fact that HONDO played across the country in 3-D. To be fair, he was 16 years old when it was released, and probably paid very little attention to the distribution pattern for his father’s new film.

The June, 1991 broadcast did substantially well in ratings, and collected a good amount of money for charity through the sale of glasses. But a video restoration was not enough for the determined Mr. Wayne; he wanted to insure that his father’s film-making legacy would survive for future generations. Commencing in April of 1994, Wayne and Symmes began an exhaustive on-film restoration of HONDO in hopes that someday it would be re-issued into theaters. The extensive restoration took several months and pooled various film materials and sources to create new 35mm preservation elements. The restored dual-strip 35mm 3-D print was excellent, and a great accomplishment by the team that had worked so hard to preserve the film. Unfortunately, the print was put into a storage vault and was never shown again.

When Michael Wayne passed away in 2003, his widow, Gretchen Wayne took over as head of Batjac Productions. In 2007, she announced that HONDO would be restored in a new digital 3-D version by Post Logic Studios, a company whose only previous experience in 3-D was the Robert Rodriguez film SPY KIDS 3-D. Unfortunately, between Mrs. Wayne and Post Logic Studios, more incorrect information was circulated about the film.

Noted magazines, papers and journals across the country continued to reprint the mistakes. In Variety, on May 9th, 2007, David S. Cohen’s article on Mrs. Wayne’s reissue screening at the Cannes film festival was riddled with errors. “Few people alive have seen it as it was meant to be seen,” wrote Cohen, who also added, “’Hondo’ in 3-D screened at only a few theaters and has almost never been seen in 3-D since.” In the same article, Gretchen Wayne is quoted: “I never really got it, it never really affected me that much…she says of the original 3-D, with its red-green anaglyph glasses.” Mr. Cohen not only made the same mistakes as Michael Wayne, he added his own. The only time HONDO was ever shown with anaglyphic (red and cyan, not red and green) glasses was the television broadcast of 1991.

Further confusion erupted in an article posted on digitalcontentproducer.com on May 15 by a Mr. “kraz.”  “Post Logic received the original right eye and left eye film negative, which was shot in stereoscopic anaglyph for 3D viewing,” the article erroneously said.  “Since the film was shot as an anaglyph, the left and right eye plates had to be as stable as possible, with little or no shifting between them,” one technician was quoted as saying. Aside from the fact that it is next to impossible to “shoot” an anaglyph in-camera, Post-Logic forgot all about the experts at Polaroid who had worked so hard fifty-four years earlier to insure that each theater presented HONDO in the absolute finest Polaroid projection.

Unfortunately, much of this 3-D history is forgotten today. Major industry papers such as Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times frequently reprint the now-commonplace myth that 3-D films from the ’50s were seen with “red and green” glasses. The fact is that all 50 feature films from the “Golden Age” of 3-D (including “House of Wax”, “Creature From the Black Lagoon”, “Kiss Me Kate”, “It Came From Outer Space” and even “Robot Monster”) were shown with two projectors in Polaroid projection; none were shown in the anaglyphic format during their original release.

An article in 3-D Review Online Magazine on June 7 confused the facts even more. “In fact, this will be the first time ever that Hondo will be screened in 3-D in Europe” the report said, completely overlooking the successful London playdates. “Hondo was initially released in 3-D and played for a week in select major cities. However, Warner Bros. pulled the 3-D prints and general release prints were made in regular flat aspect ratio. Theater owners also found the projection process cumbersome, and the extra expense did not add appreciably to the box-office gross, so they preferred to show regular film prints.”

Further misinformation was printed that substantiated this quote in Michael Goldman’s article in Millimeter Magazine. “It was one of very few stereoscopic 3D screenings of Hondo that the world had ever seen because Jack Warner, then president of Warner Bros. Studios, had become convinced that the 3D craze was over by the time the movie was ready to be released. Warner decided it was too expensive to release the movie wide in the stereoscopic format. Hondo was exhibited as a traditional 2D film that year, built out of the original left-eye negative, and in the decades since, it has been seen in various home-video and broadcast versions as a standard 2D movie.”  The same article repeated the misinformation about anaglyph glasses.

In conclusion, Mrs. Wayne was quoted as saying, “They were doing 3D [in the 1950s] to get people back into theaters, today, we have digital cinema, and about 700 or 800 theaters in the U.S. that can now show this movie in the format they wanted it shown in. And look what Jim Cameron and others are doing ­ that’s all coming forward as a response to home entertainment systems. That’s why I think a Hondo tour would be a huge hit. Everyone knows John Wayne, but very few people have ever seen him in the 3D format.”

We respectfully disagree. As our research has proven, John Wayne was seen in magnificent Polaroid 3-D by several million people, to say the least.

3D Preservation Logo Special thanks to Dan Symmes, Jeff Joseph, Leith Adams (Warner Bros. Archive), Sandra J. Lee and Ned Comstock (USC Cinematic Arts Library, USC Warner Bros. Archives), Newspaperarchive.com, Greg Kintz and the New York Public Library. This article and its contents © Copyright 2007, The 3-D Film Preservation Fund/Bob Furmanek/Jack Theakston

TOP 3-D MYTHS – 3D Preservation Fund

Read the entire 10 points – Top 3-D Myths – 3DFPF – 3-D Film Preservation Fund a tax exempt 501(c)3 non profit corporation

3D films of the 1950’s were viewed through red and green glasses
Not true. Except for a few short films presented in anaglyph form in the early months of 1953 (not widely seen), all of the features, shorts, and cartoons exhibited in commercial theaters from 1952 through 1955 were projected using polarized light. The glasses had colorless lenses exactly like today’s …

Does a 3-D film have to be shot twice in order to yield a 2-D version?
No. Contrary to the memories of some cast members of 2-D films, a 3-D film only need be shot with a 3-D camera to yield a 2-D print later. Simply put, …

The confusion may lie in the fact that a handful of early CinemaScope productions were shot in both the anamorphic CinemaScope ratio (2.55-1) and the standard

3D glasses cause eyestrain/headaches

Not true. 3D glasses are passive, in that they do not DO anything except filter light, much as …
…for several reasons:

  1. Improper camera 3D technique – This is especially critical in 3D films since the image is …
  2. Improper projection technique – Keeping the projectors in correct synchronization and phase is critical; unfortunately, these standards were f…
    …was a big problem. It STILL is.
  3. Eyes – We all see 3D differently. It is highly subjective. Roughly 10% of us cannot see 3D well, or at all, …
    …though this is fairly inconsequential compared to the other major issues.

The 3-D glasses were always made out of cardboard
Not true. This was true only initially in 1953. Once it was clear that there was a market for 3-D, the studios addressed the complaints about the problems with the cardboard frames by introducing plastic frames and even clips-ons for people who regularly wore glasses. And they were available for purchase in those times. …

3D Movies were “cheesy” exploitation films with lower string talent
Not true. Here’s a partial list of some big stars that appeared in front of the 3-D camera: John Wayne, Rita Hayworth, Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel, Bob Fosse, Robert Mitchum, Linda Darnell, Jack Palance, Edward G. Robinson, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, Jane …

Great directors and cinematographers worked on these films, including …

3D Movies of the 1950’s were loaded with gimmicks to show off the process

Too many bad 3D movies killed off 3D in 1950s

3D Movies of the 1950’s were not in widescreen

3D films today are of higher technical quality than those of the 1950’s

KISS ME KATE and HONDO were shown mostly flat in their original engagements

DIAL M FOR MURDER was never shown in 3D in its original release

INVADERS FROM MARS and THEM were shot in 3D

Again, read the entire, interesting, unexpergated, article: Top 3-D Myths – 3DFPF – 3-D Film Preservation Fund a tax exempt 501(c)3 non profit corporation

Taste Treat: The Schubin Cafe

Regardless, the days of chance stumblings across his material for this TechTrainspotter, and abortive trial runs at various sites for Mark’s podcasts and other materials, appear to be over.

The site has been running in background mode since July, with expectations to go “Live” with an Official Launch in October.

Lest we waste any more of your time here, this article will end. Be certain to come back when you need some DCinema information. We’ll understand if you disappear for a while, addicted to the years and years of data and nuance to munch on at the Schubin Cafe…we’re already well into the l’Antipasto section of the menu, and have charted a plan through Il Primo…

REDucation Returns to LA Center Studios

Taken from a press release printed in Millimeter:

REDucation Returns to LA Center Studios | The Briefing Room September 8th, 2009

Dates Announced for the Only RED Approved, Fully Immersive, Hands-on Education and Training

Three-day RED Post moves through all the stages of prepping files for postproduction, editing, color grading and finishing. RED Post is real world, in-depth workflow training for professionals. RED Tech and RED Post bookend Community Day, where experts and companies present innovative technologies and products to REDucation attendees and to the public. Sponsors for Community Day include; Adobe, AJA, Alternative Rentals, Assimilate, Autodesk, Automatic Duck, Birns & Sawyer-Hollywood, Bogen Imaging, BOXX, Cine RAID, Digital Vision, da Vinci, DIT Station, DVS, FilmLight, G-Technology, H20 PhotoPros, IDX, IGI, IRIDAS, JMR, KeyCode Media, Keslow Camera, LaCie, MacProfessionals, MAXX Digital, Media Distributors, MTI Film, NEBTEK, nextLAB, O’Connor, Petrol, R3D Data Manager, RedRock Micro, Rimage, Rosco, Sachtler, Schneider Optics, Silverado, and Sony Creative Software.

REDucation was developed by industry leaders that became Founding Members, including; Alternative Rentals, HD EXPO – Createasphere, FotoKem, Keslow Camera, PlasterCITY Digital Post and Michael Cioni. HD EXPO – Createasphere is the operations arm of the training and have scheduled two more dates later in the year.

Kristin Petrovich, founder of HD EXPO – Createasphere and a Founding Member of REDucation commented that, “REDucation offers the latest and best information to the RED community; the curriculum has been developed by a group of expert industry leaders under the tutelage of RED. Our event in July sold out quickly and turned into a vibrant educational and community ‘happening.’ October’s REDucation is looking like it will be another hit; engaging, vibrant and intensely informative.”

Spaces for REDucation-October are filling up fast. For further information, please visit reducation.net or call 818.842.6611.

About REDucation

Launched in July 2009, REDucation is the only RED approved and sanctioned education for learning RED. Comprised of RED Tech, RED Post, and Community Day, the training is a fully immersive, hands-on experience with international participation. Community Day is open to the public and features RED booths and presentations from recognized industry sponsors. HD EXPO – Createasphere operates REDucation, which was created by the founding group of industry leaders including RED, HD EXPO – Createasphere, FotoKem, Keslow Camera, Apple, FOX, Alternative Rentals, and PlasterCITY Digital Post. For further information, visit www.reducation.net or call 818.842.6611.

Blackmagic secures first sales after DaVinci buyout

From an article at BroadcastNow.co.uk:

Blackmagic secures first sales after DaVinci buyout | News | Broadcast

15 September, 2009 | By Will Strauss

Blackmagic chief executive Grant Petty said: “We needed new features and we learned that they were for sale. …

Meanwhile, at IBC, Smoke and Mirrors purchased two DaVinci Resolve R360 systems. One will be installed …

Plans are already underway to change the way that DaVinci operates including…

Support for 2K systems will continue and parts will be made available for customer repairs. …

Annual support contracts will also immediately cease and be replaced with a “pay as you go” system.

Best IBC Article 1 – BROADer Issue

From an article at:

the BROADer issue September 09, 2009

Sunny skies over Amsterdam & the media tech industry?

After a fairly dismal few months, when almost everybody I spoke to complained of belts that are too tight, of long pockets and short arms, and [insert your cliche of choice here], there’s a certain positiveness about these deals.

Perhaps it’s not just a coincidence that fine weather is forecast for Amsterdam …

In an email I saw re-published on the @fxguide website, Grant Petty, Blackmagic Design’s CEO, reveals…:

“…one of the things that totally blew my mind when I first started in post production as an engineer way back in 1988 was the color grading room with a DaVinci….

Petty will not be drawn on plans for the DaVinci product line or the prospect of low-cost products, …

Avid’s purchase of Max-T came as a bit of a surprise, but now it’s happened, it makes sense.

Sledgehammer, Max-T’s storage and infrastructure product, one assumes, contains features …

MaxEdit is perhaps the more interesting of the company’s main products, though.

Editing over a network, free of an application, via a browser, and using centralised resources, is …

Avid has hundreds of millions of dollars in the bank and it needs to raise its game in the face of stiff competition …

MULTIDYNE INTRODUCES FOUR-CHANNEL 3G HD FIBER OPTIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM

Read the entire story at: MultiDyne HD-4400
“The MultiDyne HD-4400 designed under the openGear standard will continue to give broadcasters the flexibility they desire when it comes to selecting only the most advanced technology compatible with their existing equipment,” says Jim Jachetta, senior vice president of engineering and product development. “The HD-4400 is perfect to meet the demands for today’s high definition, on-the-go sports or news production environments. Nowadays, mobile production is so complex that often two or three mobile production trucks are required. Several dozen 3G HD video feeds need to be shared between all these production vehicles, and with limited space in these trucks, the HD-4400 is the perfect high-density solution for video pool feed distribution.”

Ideal for high-capacity fiber trunking of 3G HD-SDI signals in a broadcast facility, the HD-4400 transmitter card accepts four multi-rate HD-SDI electrical signals with speeds of 5 Mb to 3 Gb per second as inputs. These inputs are equalized, re-clocked and converted to four optical outputs. The receiver card accepts four fiber optic inputs and converts them to four fiber optic electrical outputs, which are re-clocked and line buffered. Both the transmitter and receiver cards include a 4×4 matrix switcher to cross connect any of the four input and output channels.

The HD-4400’s 4×4 switching and cross-connect feature provides 3G HD signal routing and automatic redundancy capability. The system can also transport four redundant 3G HD-SDI feeds with automatic protection switching, supporting SDI, HD-SDI, 3G HD-SDI, DVB, ASI and SMPTE standards 424M, 292M, 259M and 310M.

Several model variations of the HD-4400 will also be available from MultiDyne, providing a variety of fiber transport and switching options for customers including the HD-4300, triple 3G HD-SDI option with a 3×3 switch for openGear, the HD-4200 dual 3G-HD-SDI with a 2×2 switch for openGear and a HD-4100 single 3G HD-SDI model with one 3G HD-SDI channel and no switch or protection switching.                       

About MultiDyne:
For more than 30 years, MultiDyne has been a leading provider of innovative and outstanding video and fiber-optic-based transport and routing systems for the broadcast, cable, satellite, production, digital cinema, pro A/V, corporate, retail, surveillance, teleconferencing, judicial arraignment, transportation, government, military, and healthcare markets. MultiDyne’s fiber optic transport and routing systems for video, SDI, 3G HD, DVB/ASI, VGA, DVI, HDMI, audio, AES, Ethernet, data, CATV, as well as the company’s other broadcast accessories are used worldwide by such industry leaders as ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, RAI, BBC and the Department of Transportation. MultiDyne provides a seven-year warranty on its core product line. For more information, call MultiDyne at 1-877-MULTIDYNE or 1-516-671-7278, visit the company’s Web site at www.multidyne.com, or send an e-mail to [email protected].

# # #
Photo Download:
Please click here to download photo

Media Contact:
Kate Lee
D. Pagan Communications, Inc.
+1 (631) 659-2309, ext. 21
[email protected]

Company Contact:
+1 (516) 671-7278, ext. 302
[email protected]

Using Ultrasound to Enable Touchable Holograms

Read the entire story at:

Tokyo University Researchers Using Ultrasound Technology to Enable Touchable Holograms | InteractiveTV Today

According to an article in MIT’s Technology Review publication, the touchable hologram’s visual component is generated by projecting an image from an LCD projector onto a concave mirror. A white paper abstract from the Tokyo University team behind the project explains its tactile (“haptic”) component as follows: “The Airborne Ultrasound Tactile Display is designed to provide tactile feedback in 3D free space. The display radiates airborne ultrasound, and produces high-fidelity pressure fields onto the user’s hands, without the use of gloves or mechanical attachments. The method is based on a nonlinear phenomenon of ultrasound: acoustic radiation pressure. When an object interrupts the propagation of ultrasound, a pressure field is exerted on the surface of the object. This pressure is called acoustic radiation pressure…The acoustic radiation pressure is proportional to the energy density of the ultrasound.

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The spatial distribution of the energy density of the ultrasound can be controlled by using the wave field synthesis techniques. With an ultrasound transducer array, various patterns of pressure field are produced in 3D free space. Unlike air-jets, the spatial and temporal resolutions are quite fine. The spatial resolution is comparable to the wavelength of the ultrasound. The frequency characteristics are sufficiently fine up to 1 kHz. The airborne ultrasound can be applied directly onto the skin without the risk of penetration. When the airborne ultrasound is applied on the surface of the skin, due to the large difference between the characteristic acoustic impedance of the air and that of the skin, about 99.9% of the incident acoustic energy is reflected on the surface of the skin. Hence, this tactile feedback system does not require the users to wear any clumsy gloves or mechanical attachments.” The Airborne Ultrasound Tactile Display is guided by a “vision-based hand tracking system,” the team explains, adding that “the tactile display exerts the radiation pressure on the user’s hands when they ‘touch’ 3D virtual objects.” A demo video of the new technology and the touchable holograms it enables is embedded above. More information on the project is available at: http://www.alab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~siggraph/08/Tactile/SIGGRAPH08_abst.pdf

…Like Tangents In Rain