As a viewer of geekbrief.tv, I was interested to hear Germany get a mention this week. The reason was the Photokina trade fair taking place in Cologne.
For some reason, their presenter Cali doesn’t feel that there is anything new on the news feeds from the fair – I beg to differ and took a look at the news coming out of Cologne. I also went to the Photokina part of another show taking place in Gießen at the same time to see some things for myself.
New versions of Adobe Products
Adobe showed CS4 versions of their products Photoshop, After Effects, and Premiere Pro. They use OpenGL2.0 to speed up zooming, turning the desktop, moving images, anti-aliasing and some 3D effects. They require a PC with at minimum of 128MB graphics memory. The Premiere Pro utilises NVIDIA Quatro graphics cards to make video effects quicker to calculate. It also allows more than one HD-stream to edited at a time.
GPS camera add-on
There are some high-end cameras on the market that have the ability to ‘tag’ pictures with the GPS co-ordinates of the location that the photo was taken. These tend to be expensive and GPS is normally not a reason to buy a new camera.
A company called Jobo have invented a GPS receiver that sits on top of your camera and records the co-ordinates separately. The data is later converged with the photos back on the PC rather than in the camera intself.
37.5 Megapixels
A single-lens-reflex-camera from Leica offering 37.5 megapixels was being shown. It is expected to be released in Summer 2009. It has a 3 inch display and is waterproof and dustproof – two vital elements for taking it hiking with me. But do I really need 37.5 megapixels?
The digital camera testcard
Visitors to Photokina received a free digital camera testcard (in A0 format: 841×1189mm) with which they can check out features of their camera. See it at http://6mpixel.org/?p=351 – non visitors can order it within Germany for 20EUR+VAT.
Make your own TV show
As much as I like the idea of a GPS tagger and the testcard, this one has to be my favourite of the week: make.tv. The site offer flash-based video editing, which at the moment is free. What I particularly like is the fact that cameras can be at different locations but the output is mixed from a single computer. The finished video podcast can then be streamed from the make.tv server.
It’s something that I’d like to try out in a future project!
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