Category Archives: Video

Al Jazeera Providing Excellent Live Coverage of Japan Earthquake

UPDATE: No sooner had I posted this piece than Al Jazeera switched to cover the other major story of the unrest and military strikes in Libya. They continue to be switching back and forth between the stories.

Like many of us here in North America, I had never watched Al Jazeera prior to the chaos in the Middle East over the last month or two… but when I did I was impressed with the coverage they offered. And so with the massive Japanese quake in the last hours, it is perhaps no surprise that Al Jazeera is once again providing great non-stop coverage:

http://english.aljazeera.net/watch_now/

Incredibly surreal footage… my thoughts are definitely with all the people affected by this massive event.

Aljazeeralive


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The Back Story Behind The Darth Vader Boy in the VW SuperBowl Commercial

Unless you were offline the past few days, it’s been hard to miss mentions of the (admittedly cute) VW SuperBowl ad that features a young boy playing Darth Vader, complete with the ever-impressive Star Wars soundtrack. Certainly in my circles, it has been tweeted, facebooked, blogged, and shared in pretty much any other way…

MaxpageIt turns out that there is another great part to the story… by way of Luke Armour (on Facebook), I learned that the child actor, Max Page, was a patient at the Los Angeles Children’s Hospital where he received a pacemaker at 4 months of age.

It’s cool to see this story behind the story… and the L.A. Children’s Hospital certainly gets kudos on a several points:

  • Just getting this story out there as a blog post for people to find and share;
  • Nicely mixing in pictures and video into their post;
  • Posting the photos up to Flickr as well as the blog post;
  • Imprinting/watermarking the images with their logo for all the people, like me, who will use those images in posts like this one.

Sure, it’s a textbook case of riding on a wave of viral publicity to promote your organization (L.A. Children’s Hospital) and cause (children who suffer from heart conditions)… but… DUH!… that’s what the communications team for an organization should be doing!

Well done, L.A. Children’s Hospital! Thanks for giving us a bit more of the story behind the story. (And kudos to Max Page, too, for his well done role in the ad.)


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Watching Cairo Burn… And Egypt Go Offline…

We truly do live in amazing times. From my home here in New Hampshire, I could watch the amazing footage coming out of Cairo, Egypt, courtesy of the Al Jazeera English live video stream:

cairo1.jpg

Incredible pictures… and an excellent job when I listened by the Al Jazeera anchors and staff as they tried to make sense of what all was happening.

Even more so as the Egyptian government seems to have severed all connectivity to the global Internet! Hundreds of stories have been written about this today, but the simplest illustration may be this chart attributed to Arbor Networks:

egypttraffic.jpg

Internet connectivity into Egypt simply…. ended, outside of a few scattered pockets of connectivity.

The saga in Egypt will continue to play out over the hours and days ahead… it’s a crazy time there right now… I do hope it all works out without too much chaos, but we’ll see…


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Beautifully done video celebrating IBM’s 100 year history

Yesterday IBM put out a beautifully done video celebrating their 100th year of operations. It’s very obviously professionally done (unlike many of the other videos I mention here), but I really like how they tell the story of the 100 years through 100 different people.

Well done, IBMers, and congrats on the many, many milestones that made up your history!


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Video/Animation – How Our Perspective on Time Affects Us

Stumbled upon this fascinating video / animation from the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA) titled: “RSA Animate – The Secret Powers of Time“. The abstract is:

Professor Philip Zimbardo conveys how our individual perspectives of time affect our work, health and well-being. Time influences who we are as a person, how we view relationships and how we act in the world.

and the video is really an animation of a whiteboard drawing that goes along with the talk. It’s brilliantly done, and I see that the RSA has several other videos with “RSA Animate” titles that look similar.

I found it a fascinating glimpse into a topic I’ve always been curious about… how the pace of our lives affects our interaction with those around us and even with ourselves and our inner thoughts.

Along the the way there was a brief side note about technology and kids that included this quote that I agree with:

We are underestimating the power of technology in re-wiring young peoples’ brains.

All in all, I thought it was a good use of 10 minutes – stimulated a number of thoughts I want to follow up on. Enjoy:


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Hands-on: Using iMovie on the iPhone 4 to create, edit and post to YouTube

Every since Apple released iMovie for the iPhone 4 I had been wanting to make a video start-to-finish on the iPhone 4 for no other reason than to see how it worked.  I recently had that opportunity and the result is this Emerging Tech Talk interview with Phil Wolff from Skype Journal:

As other reviewers have noted (two examples: Ars Technica and MacLife), the iMovie app is very limited in terms of the kind of editing you can do and particularly in the types of titling and transitions. When you start a project you choose a “Theme” and that then establishes what titles and transitions you can use. I chose the “Modern” theme and the result is the titles you see.

It was rather frustrating in that I like to have “end credits” at the end of my videos that describe a bit about the video and also leave with a URL for people to go to. If you look at any of my other ETT episodes (like this one) you can see what I’m trying to do. With iMovie on the iPhone, as you’ll see at the end I wound up using a bunch of half-screen credits to get the effect I wanted to do.

One other frustration was that I couldn’t crop the video… and in my case part of my finger wound up being in the video.

While limited in editing, I will say that it was rather cool to do all of this on a mobile device:

  1. Shoot the video interview with Phil. Note that I used iMovie’s ability to switch cameras to first get a clip of me talking and then switch to Phil.
  2. Edit the video to remove a couple of sections where we went off on tangents or just into content that didn’t need to be in the video.
  3. Add opening and end credits.
  4. Add overlay titles for Phil’s title and later his website.
  5. Export the video to a 720p video file.
  6. Upload and publish the video to YouTube. (Note that this upload/publish is not actually done by “iMovie” but rather from the other “Photos” application on the iPhone.)

Once I got the hang of using the controls on iMovie on the iPhone, it was pretty simple and easy to do. Apple does provide a FAQ with some helpful info.

I had to cut my ITEXPO trip short due to some family issues, but my intent had been to do the editing and publishing directly from the conference floor. Given the lack of good WiFi at the event, I’m not sure that I really could have done much uploading there… but I certainly could have done the editing – and even done that on the plane trip home.

Given the much greater power of iMovie on my regular Macs, I’m not sure how much I’ll personally use this iMovie on the iPhone. For the work involved, I think it’s much easier to transfer the movie over onto my iMac and do the editing right there. However, I can definitely see this as a way to do mobile video production and will probably wind up trying it out some more at future events.

If you want to try it yourself, iMovie is available from the App Store and costs $4.99 US.

If you have tried it out already, what did you think of it?


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Will It Blend + Old Spice = Positively Brilliant!

By way of TechCrunch, who had a brilliant headline, “When Memes Collide“, I learned of this new video from the good folks at BlendTec… Enjoy!

Brilliant work on BlendTec’s part to merge their own viral meme with that of Old Spice! Kudos to them.


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Prezi + ScreenFlow + YouTube = Video/Screencast Awesomeness!

What do you get when you combine a presentation done with Prezi and the screen capture tool ScreenFlow?

A pretty cool way to quickly create a video to tell a story!

This morning our Voxeo Labs team was working on launching a new application called “Tropo AGItate“. They had a blog post, but it didn’t really go far enough in telling the story of how this new service worked. So our CEO Jonathan Taylor, who has been experimenting a lot with Prezi lately, whipped up a quick Prezi to explain what happens. A group of us collectively tweaked it a small bit … and then I launched ScreenFlow on my iMac, put Prezi in full-screen mode and recorded the presentation with a voiceover.

It did take me several takes to get the timing down right… but after that I simply went to the File menu in ScreenFlow, chose “Publish to YouTube…“, filled out the video description fields… and a few minutes later the video was exported and uploaded to YouTube!

Super simple and easy! And we were pleased with the result:

(Warning to my marketing friends: This is from our Labs team and so is on the geekier side of things 🙂

P.S. A tip to anyone who my try this kind of recording themselves… Prezi lets you advance using the right arrow key, so I didn’t have to use my mouse at all.


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Novelty trumps production values – for a while (the maturation of new media and video)

Video Camera

A few weeks back, Mitch Joel wrote a great post on his blog called “Online Video Can Kill Your Credibility” that really asked those of us involved with video online to step up our game a bit and really look at how to make better videos.  Mitch, who admittedly does not create video himself, pointed out that with the sheer volume of videos being uploaded daily we need to look at how to improve the production so that our videos stand out.  He offered several suggestions, of which I’ll point out:

  • AUDIO – It has always amazed me how incredibly important audio is to video. Mitch has a number of good pointers here.
  • LIGHTING – This may be obvious, but it’s a point that people so often don’t pay enough attention to – make sure you have good lighting!
  • BACKGROUNDS – It does matter what is behind you. Does it support your story? Or does it at least not detract from your story? (i.e. do people watching your video spend their time trying to figure out what the big orange thing on your shelf is?)

I agree with Mitch on the value in Steve Garfield’s great book, Getting Seen – and I in fact recorded a video review about the book.

However, I’m not sure I entirely agree with Mitch’s overall view that without improving production values your videos are doomed to die.

It all depends upon your audience.

It may be that the format for your videos may be perfectly fine as the “man-in-the-street” form with quick interviews taken with a Flip camera and rapidly posted. It may be that your video shot in your messy office fits in with the theme of the show.

Or not.

Mitch’s post is a great reminder of the natural evolution that occurs in every “new media” as it matures into just “media”. Go back to the mid-80s when the Macintosh first came out and brought everyone into the world of “desktop publishing”. Do you remember the “ransom note publishing” that ensued when everyone started throwing a zillion fonts on a page just because they could? Do you remember how many horrid looking documents were created? Over time, though, people learned to use the tools better and expectations were raised for a higher level of document.

Similarly, back in the early ’90s when the Web was brand new, pretty much everyone had to connect in to a server and edit HTML files by hand. The fact that you HAD a web site was the huge deal – so people didn’t care as much about what it looked like. Over time, expectations have been raised and (thankfully!) many of the atrocious sites have been left back in the 90’s.

Ditto podcasting… back in the early 2000’s when podcasting first appeared it was perfectly fine if someone just turned on the microphone and pressed record. It was a new, joint experiment and any podcast was cool… ditto video podcasts…

Novelty trumps production values.

To Mitch’s point, though, there comes a point in time when the “new media” is so commoditized that higher quality content does rise and get greater visibility. It is up to all of us who create video to take a look and ask ourselves – what will we do to stand out from the competition? How will you improve the quality of what you are doing?

I know what I want to do with my show – what are you going to do with yours?

P.S. And yes, we’re in this funny state where you don’t want to improve your quality too much or people see it as “too commercial” and “not authentic” – there’s a balance in there somewhere… that will undoubtedly change over time as well.

Note: Photo courtesy of pursuethepassion on Flickr.


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Mashable: Hilarious parody “Twitter Movie” trailer

Saw this article in Mashable and just did have to share it here… for those of us who have been involved with Twitter since its early days, it is fun to laugh at some of the more inane aspects of the service. Enjoy:

Kudos to the team who put this together!


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