Suggested Reading
  • Africa: A Biography of the Continent
    Africa: A Biography of the Continent
    by John Reader

    A fascinating introduction to the context of Africa.

  • Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa
    Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa
    by Dambisa Moyo

    What I'm reading right now...

  • Omnivore's Dilemma
    Omnivore's Dilemma
    by Michael Pollan

    What I'm listening to right now...

  • Zen and Japanese Culture
    Zen and Japanese Culture
    by Daisetz T. Suzuki

    What got me hooked on Eastern Philosophy.

  • Secrets of Heaven (Swedenborg, Emanuel, Works.) (v. 1)
    Secrets of Heaven (Swedenborg, Emanuel, Works.) (v. 1)
    by Emanuel Swedenborg

    A novel and alternative view of reality.

  • Tao Te Ching
    Tao Te Ching
    by Stephen Mitchell

    The best translation, in my opinion.

  • A New Kind of Science
    A New Kind of Science
    by Stephen Wolfram

    One of the most formative books, for me, in a decade.

  • The Art and Science of Digital Compositing, Second Edition: Techniques for Visual Effects, Animation and Motion Graphics (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Computer Graphics)
    The Art and Science of Digital Compositing, Second Edition: Techniques for Visual Effects, Animation and Motion Graphics (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Computer Graphics)
    by Ron Brinkmann

    In the Pixel Corps, we call this "The Good Book of Brinkmann"

  • The DV Rebel's Guide: An All-Digital Approach to Making Killer Action Movies on the Cheap (Peachpit)
    The DV Rebel's Guide: An All-Digital Approach to Making Killer Action Movies on the Cheap (Peachpit)
    by Stu Maschwitz

    If you are going to make your own film with your own money, read this first.

  • Digital Compositing for Film and Video, Second Edition (Focal Press Visual Effects and Animation)
    Digital Compositing for Film and Video, Second Edition (Focal Press Visual Effects and Animation)
    by Steve Wright

    In the Pixel Corps, we call this the "Good Book of Wright".

Or Here...
Twitter Updates
Stuff to Listen To...
  • Tuku Music
    Tuku Music
    by Oliver Mtukudzi

    One of the best CDs from one of the best artists in Africa (or anywhere).

  • I Want You Back
    I Want You Back
    Hoodoo Gurus Pty

    Classic Hoodoo Gurus...you gotta love it.

  • Nhemamusasa: Instrumental Excerpt I
    Nhemamusasa: Instrumental Excerpt I
    Nonesuch

    What I work to 90% of the time...

  • Penny Is Poison
    Penny Is Poison
    RCA Records Label

    The best song you never heard from the Verve Pipe.

  • Mental Jewelry
    Mental Jewelry
    Radioactive

    One of my top 10 albums ever...

  • The Marching Song Of The Covert Battalions (LP Version)
    The Marching Song Of The Covert Battalions (LP Version)
    Rhino/Elektra

    I got into a political debate with Billy Bragg in 1991. I lost. And it changed me forever.

  • The Glutton Of Sympathy
    The Glutton Of Sympathy
    Charisma

    You've probably never heard this song before... more's the pity.

  • Vanorapa
    Vanorapa
    Cumbancha

    One of my good, and painfully talented, friends...

  • Testimony: Vol. 1, Life & Relationship
    Testimony: Vol. 1, Life & Relationship
    by India.Arie

    Great music, Great lyrics, Great Singer.

  • Maria
    Maria
    Four Quarters Records

    I saw Blick at HIFA in 2007. Incredible. From Cameroon, in French, mixes well with Brazilian BBQ. This song is a good start.

Friday
Jul012011

Thoughts on FCP X

 So it's been about a week and many are calling Apple's new Final Cut Pro X a failure. Is this premature? Let's take a look.

(BTW... you can see a 2 hour discussion on FCPX with Steve Martin, Mark Spencer, and Myself at HERE)

To begin,  it seems like everyone covering this needs to qualify how they use Final Cut Pro to explain their angle. Here's mine ...

I edited my first project with 2 VCRs in 1987. I actually taught people Premiere 4.0. I worked with Media100 for a while and I later used Premiere 4.2 for pre-vis quick edits and dropping footage to tape at Lucasfilm. I also hacked around on Avid at the Ranch -- just enough to grab clips I needed.

I started with Final Cut Pro 1.0 when it was released in 1999. I have used it for a decade now. My company trains people to create media, we also do a fair amount of it ourselves. I would not call myself a "hotshot" editor, but I've pushed the boundaries of the app fairly regularly ... which wasn't hard.

I AM affected by the FCP update. We use probably half the features Apple cut. To add insult to injury, they added a great keyer that killed off one of my company's most lucrative revenue streams. So ... I have some skin in the game, or in this case, some skin left on the field. 

So why did Apple do this? Why are editors so upset? Who is actually going to use this app? Who will win in the editing world?

Before we go into that, I need to pop some your bubbles: there were some parts of Final Cut that were above average, many parts of Final Cut Pro that were OK, and a few that just plain sucked. We took it because of the range of resolutions and relative ease of editing. Oh, and for a while it was much cheaper than Avid, and Premiere wasn't even on the Mac. 

I need to vent, just for a minute ... 

Scopes - Really? They were ugly, inaccurate, and only worked in playback -- when you really NEEDED them in capture. In general, they were almost useless. And sometimes less than useless -- harmful.

Capturing - Sure you could capture, but the window was modal.  If you were capturing really hi-res footage it would drop frames when YOUR MOUSE rolled over the window. Live camera capture didn't include timecode ... not that I'm bitter.

Audio - Slow draw, low resolution cursor, Previewing was unintuitive. Compessor was HORRIBLE. You had to move the audio in whole frame chunks. Round trips to Soundtrack worked ... sometimes. Other times, it mangled the return. And Soundtrack, no matter how hard I tried to love it, was a dog. A pretty dog, but too sluggish to work in day to day.

Garbage matte plugin - THE WORST implementation of garbage mattes ever created. I'm pretty sure Rain Man wrote it because I found myself muttering unintelligibly within minutes of trying to use it.

The Keyer - OK, I love the keyer. Not because it was great, but because it was soooo bad that my company made a good living building a replacement, dvMatte. 

Color Correction and Management - Nearly Nonexistent. Color was impressive, but slow and buggy. Thank the editing gods for Colorista. 

Exporting - I always just exported, no re-compression. I would explain to all of our editors, "Just try to get the edit out of FCP in one piece, we'll worry about compression later."

Rendering - Sneeze in the wrong direction and you will need to render every 15 minutes.

Object handing - Start building up a sizeable library and watch Final Cut start grinding to a halt. Mix and match the resolutions and you're screwed.

Playback - Sometimes it worked ... unless you were at an odd reduced size (like 26%) or part of the PGM was cut off.

I did mention is was 32-bit, right?

OK.  There's more, alot more, but I'm done for now.

So, back to our regularly scheduled program ... Why did Apple do this? Why did they overhaul the most popular editing application of all time (well, second most popular behind iMovie)?

Um ... you did starting reading this from the top, right? Fixing the issues above was not trivial. These issues were systematic limitations. Fixing many of these would be pulling at the digital bailing the Final Cut Pro was held together with. To be fair, all apps have some of this. You design them with the best intentions, but they are based on what you know now, not what will be available in 10 years. Final Cut Pro was on a road to nowhere for a while. There was no clean way to upgrade it. I think Apple had no choice but to rewrite from scratch. 

When you have to do a rewrite, it's both a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge is dealing with all the morass of trying to figure out what you are going to keep. The opportunity is to step back and decide how you would do it differently. Evidently, Apple decided it would do A LOT differently. In fact, it decided to rethink the editing process completely and focus on the process of editing rather than the specific tools that we are comfortable with. At the core of the process appears to be speed and ease of use. Everything is designed to work in real time or the background. Very fluid, but today it looks like if it didn't fit cleanly into these two areas, it was shelved.

It appears that Apple took a very long view and chose let go of the present fortune for a possible fortune in the future. And they can afford to. The revenue from FCPS was a rounding error compared to iPhone and iPad sales. I'm actually fairly surprised they kept it going it all. Apple's ability to make this radical change is unique. A mass exodus of core users would be devastating for Adobe or Avid. 

So why are editors so upset?

It's clear that many editors feel betrayed, discarded, and generally unloved. And they are pretty upset. To understand this, you need to understand the process of high-end editing. In some sense, editing is just editing. You are making creative designs and telling a story. This can be done on any application, BUT, when you are a high-end pro (top 200,000 or so editors), you can do this very fast. This means that you understand the tricks, know the keystrokes and can do a ripple edit in your sleep (because sometimes you have to). You built a workflow that often incorporates SANs and protocols and involves many people beyond your workstation. If you are a company, you are adding new workstations all the time and assimilating new recruits into the system.

Apple has upset all of this and put many of these editors and companies in a bind. Final Cut Pro X is not an upgrade from their current version. It's a completely different application. It would probably be easier to port your FCP projects to Avid or Premiere than into FCPX. To make matters worse, it lacks many of the features these high-end editors need. This leaves them in a quandary.

A) The app their whole world is based on is dead. Do they continue to work on it or move to something else?

B) All the projects they have worked on for 10 years are borked in the future. No matter what they do, they will eventually need to keep some old Mac around to service clients who come in a year from now for a re-edit.

C) They can't grow until they jump to something new. You can't buy Final Cut Pro 7 now -- meaning that if you want to just stay put, you can't add more workstations to handle new editors. You can't put the decision off. You need to act now!

You can see why making a bad choice (all of these are bad) in a short period of time would make anyone crazy mad. A week ago, they were waiting for Apple, the company that constantly surprises us with wonderfully shiny new toys, to bestow upon them their new ninja sword. What they got, in their eyes, was a plastic sword with rounded edges.

So if not for the high-end editors that Apple has spent a decade courting, who were they thinking of when they wrote this mess?

I've talked to a lot of folks over the last week. Some where upset editors but many were not. Here are some examples:

Marketing staff - Video is no longer a bonus on a website -- it's a requirement. Many of these folks have been building marketing videos for their company in iMovie. They never got Final Cut Express, but they are bursting at the iMovie seams. They hire people to do some of this (we produce 20-60 videos for corporate clients a month) but smaller companies and smaller products don't have the budget to go out of house. Many times, the folks working on these videos understand the product but just barely understand video production.

Photographers - They are NOT videographers -- they grew up on stills. But it's a brave new world and everywhere they turn, people are expecting video. For many of these artists, Final Cut Pro is daunting. The new version gives them many of the tools they need but in a much simpler package.

Educators - The education system in the US and around the world is changing very rapidly and video is a large part of this revolution. Folks building this content are not trying to cut the next Star Wars, they need to pull all the elements together -- but with more control than iMovie.

Beginning Filmmakers - They have a vision, but not the skills to get crazy with the edit.

Podcasters - Most of these folks what to create shows on low/no budget... not edit the next masterpiece. FCPX is a great tool for this.

Sooo ... IF Apple loses 10%  the 200,000 high-end editors (and I think this is generous … the real number is probably near 50,000) but gains these markets, will it be an even trade? No, not at all -- each of these markets is 10 times the size of the current high-end editing market. If only a small percentage buy FCPX, Apple's installed base will double, and quickly. Almost every person I've talked to in these areas are excited about the new release. They don't want or need EDLs or multicam edits, they just want to cut their story together quickly.

This sounds like trouble for Avid and Adobe, but in the short term, it's not. Both Avid and Adobe stand to sell more editing software than at any other time in their history as high-end pro's begin to look around. Apple handed both of these companies a huge gift, wrapped in a bow. As editors begin to jump, these two companies will catch most of them. The folks who need tight integration with After Effects, Photoshop, etc., will pick Adobe. The folks who need scale and heavy guns will pick Avid. 

In the long term, the future is more fuzzy. Apple stands to gain and hold the bottom 90% of the pyramid -- if they are able to develop the application effectively. This 90% will begin to put pressure on the top 10%. We'll just have to see how committed Apple is to the future. For the many that will be entering the market with Final Cut Pro X... getting in now means that they can learn a simple application and grow with it... like many of us did with Photoshop over 20 years. It was simple when in started, really.

As someone who has had to give up every important application in my pipeline at one time or another. It will be painful but no matter what you do... it will work out.

Monday
Jun202011

The Post-PC World and the Tower of Babel

"And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower, which the children of men had built. And the Lord said, Behold, the people are one, and they have all one language, and this they begin to do: and now nothing will be restrained from them, which they have imagined to do. Go to, let us go down, and there confound their language, that they may not understand one another's speech."

Led by Steve Jobs, a growing chorus of CEOs, pundits, and average joes have begun to pile onto the "Post-PC Era" and ... they are increasingly right. While the PC isn't dead yet (I'm writing this post on an 11-inch Macbook Air), the explosion of the iPad has changed the landscape of computing forever. This revolution, for the first time in computer history, is not really being led by the geeks, many of whom still need their PCs for geekier enterprises -- it's being lead these days by a growing number of "laymen." From 3 to 80, the touch interface and easy-to-use iOS has changed not only how we compute, but who is computing. Technology-fearing doctors and lawyers, toddlers, retirees ... all are adding the tablet to their collection. Everything seems easier on the iPad ... except one thing: The Web (and its ubiquitous language of HTML).

Yes, the iPad and iPhone sport full-featured web browsers (minus Flash, but that's another story). But fully featured and fully functional are two very different things. Working with websites beyond simple browsing on an iPad or iPhone is, well, often painful. Try booking a hotel or filling out just about any form.  Yes, you _can_ do it, but it's often frustrating. The clunky interface triples the time, and frustration, of seemingly simple processes. Fortunately, many of these sites have an iPad/iPhone or Android app that works much more smoothly. And there's the rub...

Increasingly, post-PC participants are using applets to handle issues that were formerly the domain of Firefox and Safari. There are MANY advantages to this: you get a much more branded experience, a more customized experience, a more focused experience (without as much surfing around to competitors, etc), and the folks with iPads and iPhones have self-selected themselves as good consumers.

Amazon.com - There's an app for that
Hotels.com - There's an app for that
Fandango.com - app
IMDB - Yup, there's an app

These apps are not just as good as the website -- in many cases, they are better. Applications can hold more information and streamline your browsing, and buying, experience. The web, or applications written to run on a browser, can compete on ease of development and ease of distribution... but they can't compete on quality of experience. With an App, you don't have to build with generalized toolsets. You can build an application hat handles exactly what you need and displays your infomation exactly as you wish.

Apple's iCloud, Salesforce.com, Amazon Web Services, and Dropbox will accelerate this process. As applications begin to be able to share data with the cloud and, eventually, with each other, some of the seamlessness of the web will be realized in customized applications ... maybe not as much as before, but possibly enough to make the web experience less and less important.

More importantly are the new breed of apps that are not extending the web, but skipping it all together. Flipboard is not a website ... it's an app that makes websites look, well, much better than they ever did in Internet Explorer, Firefox or Safari. The Daily is a new magazine that never was a magazine and really isn't much of a website. As more and more services emerge _only_ for net applications (using the internet but skipping the web browser)... the web's foundation will continue to crack. The web will be with us for a long time, the question is... in an online world driven by advertising and commerce - if the most lucrative customers, who make up a large percentage of tablet user, begin leaving the web city for the more comfortable net-app suburbs... can the web still thrive?

As this trajectory continues, the real question may be, "who will be the last ones to turn off the web light and what will we lose in the process?" The largest casualties will most likely be freedom and ease of expression. While the web is rarely pretty, it is easy to publish to. Services like Wordpress and Squarespace have made publishing something anyone with a connection can do. Developing applications is not nearly as simple. It's also not nearly as open. The App Store is not a free-for-all. Your application needs to be approved by the mothership to be accepted.

All is not lost, though.  New publishing outlets -- like Flipboard and others -- offer new avenues, possibly easier ones, for individuals to express themselves (eventually). BUT, we're possibly moving away from a world of free expression back into a separated and curated world.

And just as we thought our tower of the web would reach the heavens of interconnectedness, it appears we may again separate into tribes and diverse, technological, languages.

 

 

---------

What do you think?

Comment here!

Tuesday
May102011

Macbreak Collaborative Experiment

OK... so I'm playing with the idea of listeners having more input on the shows...

First, I posted to Twitter for ideas...

Now... here's the notes for TODAYS Macbreak...

Comments and questions about the stories? Put them in the comments lines here.

- And yes, this is a kludge... if successful, we'll get more organized about it.

---------------------------

Macbreak Notes

Microsoft Buys Skype
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/05/microsoft-buys-skype-2/

http://gigaom.com/2011/05/10/microsoft-buying-skype/

Microsoft is buying Skype for $8.5 Billion or about $1000 per paid subscriber.
Microsoft's own Messenger network already has more subscribers
It's Hard to believe ANYONE would buy Skype after the last update.

Questions:
Does this make sense for Microsoft?
 - What distinguishes Skype from Messenger?
Does it make sense for Skype?
How will affect Mac Users?


Apple is now the #1 Brand
http://www.techradar.com/news/apple/computing/internet/world-of-tech/apple-beats-google-in-most-valuable-brand-face-off-953706?src=rss&attr=all

http://www.macworld.com/article/159749/2011/05/apple_google_brand.html#lsrc.rss_main

http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/05/09/apple_ranked_worlds_most_valuable_brand_at_153_billion.html

Apple's Brand now $153, Google $110 Billion

Questions
What does this mean?
Does it matter?
Why is Apple's Brand value so high?
Can other emulate Apple's approach?


Steve agreed with us on MobileMe
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2385078,00.asp

http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/jobs_to_2008_mobileme_team_why_the_doesnt_it_do_that/

http://www.businessinsider.com/steve-jobs-mobileme-failure-2011-5

Steve chews out executives at MobileMe launch
Demands leadership shake up

"Mr. Jobs reportedly asked the assembled engineers and other MobileMe team members, “Can anyone tell me what MobileMe is supposed to do?” When one of those employees then volunteered a satisfactory answer, Mr. Jobs followed up with, “So why the fuck doesn’t it do that?”

"He then spent some 30 minutes berating the team, telling them that they had “tarnished Apple’s reputation,” and that they, “should hate each other for having let each other down.”"

Questions

Is this any way to run a company?
Should we all be taking notes?
Was MobileMe that bad?
Is this how you make the products Apple makes?

Also note:
http://m.cultofmac.com/steve-jobs-believes-apple-will-ok-without-him/93945


Could Apple Port to ARM Processors?
http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2011/05/apple-could-adopt-arm-for-laptops-but-why-would-it.ars?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-20060366-17.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/may/09/intel-3d-transistors

Rumors are Apple is looking to move to ARM processors.


Questions
Is it a control issue?
Do we think this will really happen?
If so, when?
Is this the final move to iOS?
Would it be the end of Dual Boot?
Would it only be for entry level (air)?
What iOS have to grow to really be a laptop OS?


Could Apple buy Nuance?
http://www.electronista.com/articles/11/05/07/apple.negotiates.for.nuance.voice.command.in.ios.5/

Rumors continue to swirl that Apple will either partner or purchase Nuance... who owns arguably the most powerful voice recognition in the world.

Questions
Do we think Apple would buy or partner with Nuance?
Does owning it give Apple a key advantage?
What does it add to Apple?


Amazon Cloud Player now on iOS (via Safari)
http://lifehacker.com/5799848/amazon-cloud-player-now-works-on-your-ios-devicesort-of

http://blogs.forbes.com/marcbabej/2011/05/03/amazon-said-to-be-readying-a-color-kindle-for-the-holiday-shopping-season/



Questions from twitter and facebook.

Thunderbolt...
What is it?
What will use?
Why is it important?
When will MacPros and MacMinis have it?

Sunday
Apr242011

iPhone Tracking

So, I know many people are upset with the iPhone tracking. I am not at all for the following reasons...

1) It's not GPS information, it's cel tower/wifi information. Not very accurate.

2) There are many ways to get most of this info following my twitter feed.

3) I don't do much of anything other than hang out with family and work... so there's not much to hide.

4) It's COOOL! I found it alot of fun to see the tracking... There's something very nostalgic about it. I assume Apple will change all of this next week. I hope they leave an option for those of us who love the idea to tracking life in the background.

Here are some examples...

The World According my iPhone...

I live in California, go to Vegas, went to Phoenix, visit So Cal (by car), and went to Grass Valley...

St Maartin Trip... I think I almost hit all of them...

Rwanda - I went on Safari close to Tanzania

 

I went to Europe... lines between are cel towers near the train lines.

Paris

I grew up in Pittsburgh (visit often), connect through Charlotte (often), have meetings in DC, NYC, and Philly (often) and visited Hatteras.

Sunday
Sep052010

Ping - It's the end of the Music Industry, and I feel fine...

It took me a little time for the implications of Apple's new "Ping" Service to sink in. I set up an account (it's my job to test these things) and really found it frustrating at first… I couldn't figure out how to post independent of songs, I didn't understand why some posts were visible and others weren't… But soon, I was addicted. I am a former Music Director and the opportunity to share music that I'm fairly certain many people don't know, but should, got me excited.

More importantly, I started to watch the following of bands like U2 and Lady Gaga grow exponentially. They are tracking for a million followers in less than a month. And I realized, this could be Apple showing the Music Industry what a fully operational battle station looks like.

Why?

For a long time, Apple has had the ability to build a completely vertical market. They sell end tracks but they also sell the creation tools (Logic, etc). I found it odd that they didn't tie them together. I assumed picking this fight, for Apple, was high-risk. Why stir up a storm if you don't know if it will work?

Ping is different. Apple is simply adding a social component to iTunes. In the short term, this is very good for the "Industry"… they will sell more songs, possibly a lot more songs. But, as we look a little further down the path, their future begins to cloud.

Let's say U2 builds up 10,000,000 followers… They email their online fans, talk it up at concerts, do promos with Apple. These are folks that are fairly likely to buy U2 tunes. Let's now say that U2 releases a new acoustic version of "Sweetest Thing", only on iTunes… and posts it to their followers… How many will buy it? Probably at least 10% of their followers. Let's say they do this once a month… They will probably do better than releasing a CD… especially with a record company… and that's the point. With 10,000,000 followers… inside of the largest music store in the world… U2, really, doesn't need a label… nor does Sting, Peter Gabriel, Madonna…

Those are obvious… but this is also great news for Nine Inch Nails, XTC, the Decemberists, Arcade Fire, Zee Avi, and many many other artists that don't have a "household name" but do have a huge and growing following. They are not just building a fan mailing list on a website, they are building it inside the music store.

And if you are band just starting… building a following on iTunes will probably give you  better chance of success than a contract with a record label. Build your following organically... and they can buy as you produce.

If is good for big bands, good for medium bands and good for small bands… who is it bad for? The labels, of course. Staying relevant was already hard… now it's about to become downright unforgiving.

So what do you think? Post here...