Friday, May 5, 2023

Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Funny,
Reminds me of a project 10 years ago.
I was asked to design a capture system for a retail chain, they wanted to offer VHS digitising.
So I asked, how many tapes do you expect?
-Not that many, every store receives an average of one per week.

Now work with me. A VHS with home movies has some 2.5 hours of content.
This chain had 700 stores. (HEMA, for the Dutch and Belgian listers)

This makes 1750 hours, every week.
Divided by 5 working days and 7 hours a day pure digitising time (and that is optimistic) that needed 50 capture sets.

10 years ago I was able to do 4 streams with a (back then) relative cheap computer, straight to H264. (High end systems back then could do 4 streams of HD in DNxHD..)

Still makes sense to make a good setup with as little transcoding as possible.
Capture to DV is only transferring data, so a half decent system should be able to do 25 streams (assuming bandwidth to save is just Gigabit ethernet, and you're able to get that many ports in your system)
For VHS, a composit to DV device is dirt cheap…
Getting a decent VHS deck in good working order nowadays is another story...

It's just math on what is wise, but it will pay off if volumes are large enough to make a custom setup, and see if you can get 'some' form of automated QC.
(Let alone a system that lets you enter metadata so you can at least feed the system the label info / client / etc.)

My reason for H264:
It's SMALL, and it can be 'visually lossless' (FFmpeg -c:v libx264 -crf 16 and you're there…)

That will save on backups. (Nowadays I would put everything on YouTube anyways, let them deal with it…)


Bouke / edit 'B

videotoolshed.com
Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
+31 6 21817248
If you want to send me large files, please use:
https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/

> On 5 May 2023, at 11:49, Tim Selander <selander@tkf.att.ne.jp> wrote:
>
> Right smack dab in the middle of the same project -- hundreds of DV & VHS tapes. Using an old Mac 2011 with MC5.5, digitizing through firewire. Have the rig set up next to my desk, just keep feeding in tapes when I notice it needs another. Capture in DV, every 20 or so tapes, batch export it all to mp4 -- the Mac runs unattended, so it doesn't really take any time.
>
> Saving to local HDD and Google Drive. I have the base $9 a month, 2TB Drive that I use for a lot of stuff. There are no doubt cheaper cloud services, too. Will ANYONE ever watch all these again? Probably not!!
>
> Tim Selander
> Tokyo, Japan
>
>
>
> On 2023.05.05 5:28, Sol Fischler via groups.io wrote:
>> Hi --
>> My plan, as cockeyed as it may seem, but based on the hardware & software that I've got:
>> The video source is VHS. It's family stuff, and that's what we used. (I also have 8mm & 16mm film (Dad was a filmmaker) but right now my concern is the flood of VHS's we have in the closets. That, and I don't have a film chain.) :-)
>> My plan is to hook my VHS deck to my computer running FCP7 and digitize everything into FCP, where it creates Quicktimes. This process worked well with my entire book of work from WNBC where we had mastering everything to DVCPro -- I digitized everything through FCP and it all now lives on a couple of drives as QTs.
>> I imagine the h.264 would be an extra (time consuming) step but would save space. I'm not sure that space will be an issue, so staying with QT and not compressing it would be a good option.
>> I also have a VHS-to-DVD deck, which is why I asked about the DVD-R option. But I've also heard that DVD-R isn't particularly archival, so while in the short run it'd be easier to access and play, if the discs are going to die in 3 or 5 years, then yeah, that process would just be a waste of time...
>> ...and I know nothing about blu-ray...
>> If there are any other options that I'm not considering or aware of, please let me know --
>> Thank you!
>> -- Sol
>> -------------------------------------------------
>> Sol Fischler
>> Editor: Image & Sound
>> 914-525-2579
>> _www.solfischler.com <http://www.solfischler.com/>
>> _
>> On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 03:24:37 PM EDT, Jo's Mailinglists <lists@filter-media.net> wrote:
>> Pending the source I am not so sure why _archiving_is recommended here in H.264? I know I am in a thread with Bouke but… QT is a container, H.264 is a compression.
>> So Quicktime as a container can hold a lot of different and especially for archival purposes, different compressions.
>> Again, pending the source…
>> my 2¢
>>> On 4. May 2023, at 18:59, bouke <bouke@editb.nl <mailto:bouke@editb.nl>> wrote:
>>>
>> QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
>> (But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy stuff, like QT ref…)
>> DVD is obsolete…
>> Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the next 30 years.
>> Now, where did my latest post go?
>> Bouke / edit 'B
>> videotoolshed.com <http://videotoolshed.com/>
>> Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
>> 6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
>> +31 6 21817248
>> If you want to send me large files, please use:
>> https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/
>>> On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io <http://groups.io/> <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io <mailto:sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Off-topic I know, but:
>>>
>>> In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes? I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
>>> I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
>>> Thanks!
>>> -- Sol
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>
>
>
>
>



-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#136165): https://groups.io/g/Avid-L2/message/136165
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/98688165/2971402
Group Owner: Avid-L2+owner@groups.io
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/Avid-L2/leave/5759084/2971402/1548653033/xyzzy [administrator242.death@blogger.com]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Right smack dab in the middle of the same project -- hundreds of
DV & VHS tapes. Using an old Mac 2011 with MC5.5, digitizing
through firewire. Have the rig set up next to my desk, just keep
feeding in tapes when I notice it needs another. Capture in DV,
every 20 or so tapes, batch export it all to mp4 -- the Mac runs
unattended, so it doesn't really take any time.

Saving to local HDD and Google Drive. I have the base $9 a month,
2TB Drive that I use for a lot of stuff. There are no doubt
cheaper cloud services, too. Will ANYONE ever watch all these
again? Probably not!!

Tim Selander
Tokyo, Japan



On 2023.05.05 5:28, Sol Fischler via groups.io wrote:
> Hi --
>
> My plan, as cockeyed as it may seem, but based on the hardware &
> software that I've got:
>
> The video source is VHS.  It's family stuff, and that's what we
> used.  (I also have 8mm & 16mm film (Dad was a filmmaker) but
> right now my concern is the flood of VHS's we have in the
> closets.  That, and I don't have a film chain.)   :-)
>
> My plan is to hook my VHS deck to my computer running FCP7 and
> digitize everything into FCP, where it creates Quicktimes.  This
> process worked well with my entire book of work from WNBC where
> we had mastering everything to DVCPro -- I digitized everything
> through FCP and it all now lives on a couple of drives as QTs.
>
> I imagine the h.264 would be an extra (time consuming) step but
> would save space.  I'm not sure that space will be an issue, so
> staying with QT and not compressing it would be a good option.
>
> I also have a VHS-to-DVD deck, which is why I asked about the
> DVD-R option.  But I've also heard that DVD-R isn't particularly
> archival, so while in the short run it'd be easier to access and
> play, if the discs are going to die in 3 or 5 years, then yeah,
> that process would just be a waste of time...
>
> ...and I know nothing about blu-ray...
>
> If there are any other options that I'm not considering or aware
> of, please let me know --
>
> Thank you!
>
> -- Sol
>
>
> -------------------------------------------------
> Sol Fischler
> Editor: Image & Sound
> 914-525-2579
> _www.solfischler.com <http://www.solfischler.com/>
>
>
> _
>
>
> On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 03:24:37 PM EDT, Jo's Mailinglists
> <lists@filter-media.net> wrote:
>
>
> Pending the source I am not so sure why _archiving_is recommended
> here in H.264? I know I am in a thread with Bouke but… QT is a
> container, H.264 is a compression.
>
> So Quicktime as a container can hold a lot of different and
> especially for archival purposes, different compressions.
>
> Again, pending the source…
>
> my 2¢
>
>
>
>> On 4. May 2023, at 18:59, bouke <bouke@editb.nl
>> <mailto:bouke@editb.nl>> wrote:
>>
> QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
> (But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy
> stuff, like QT ref…)
>
> DVD is obsolete…
>
> Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the
> next 30 years.
>
> Now, where did my latest post go?
>
>
> Bouke / edit 'B
>
> videotoolshed.com <http://videotoolshed.com/>
> Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
> 6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
> +31 6 21817248
> If you want to send me large files, please use:
> https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/
>
>> On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io
>> <http://groups.io/> <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io
>> <mailto:sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io>> wrote:
>>
>> Off-topic I know, but:
>>
>> In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies &
>> tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible
>> formats...
>> I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they
>> still viable, and what are the alternatives?
>> Thanks!
>> -- Sol
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>



-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#136164): https://groups.io/g/Avid-L2/message/136164
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/98688165/2971402
Group Owner: Avid-L2+owner@groups.io
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/Avid-L2/leave/5759084/2971402/1548653033/xyzzy [administrator242.death@blogger.com]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Thursday, May 4, 2023

Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

This all sounds great - thank you very much!

-- Sol

-------------------------------------------------
Sol Fischler
Editor: Image & Sound
914-525-2579


On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 05:17:31 PM EDT, Jo's Mailinglists <lists@filter-media.net> wrote:


Yes, you should re-copy everything onto new drives once in a while. HDDs are mechanical media so having them sitting around for a long time is not recommended as their storage situation will impact their health (temperature / humidity). I would suggest every five to ten years? Given the advance of technology it won't be that much of a hassle.

Oh, one hint: you might want to get an catalog of the content and label them drives for easier access in case you are looking for something specific.

Cheers,

Jo


On 4. May 2023, at 23:06, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

One question: what did you mean by "turn around the data periodically" -- ?  Do you mean copy the entire drive onto a different (newer) drive, and if so, how often?

Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Yes, you should re-copy everything onto new drives once in a while. HDDs are mechanical media so having them sitting around for a long time is not recommended as their storage situation will impact their health (temperature / humidity). I would suggest every five to ten years? Given the advance of technology it won't be that much of a hassle.

Oh, one hint: you might want to get an catalog of the content and label them drives for easier access in case you are looking for something specific.

Cheers,

Jo


On 4. May 2023, at 23:06, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

One question: what did you mean by "turn around the data periodically" -- ?  Do you mean copy the entire drive onto a different (newer) drive, and if so, how often?

Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

So many correct assumptions --

Yes, NTSC, and FCP7 on a mid-2010 Mac Pro.
And yes, I will duplicating onto a second drive -- I will toss the VHS's, so there's no going back if my one drive fails.

This does help -- thanks so much!   :-)

One question: what did you mean by "turn around the data periodically" -- ?  Do you mean copy the entire drive onto a different (newer) drive, and if so, how often?

-- Sol

-------------------------------------------------
Sol Fischler
Editor: Image & Sound
914-525-2579


On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 04:52:55 PM EDT, Jo's Mailinglists <lists@filter-media.net> wrote:


Hi,

So some stuff ahead: VHS is SD - no need to consider Blu-ray for this (that's for HD (mainly).

FCP 7 is nice and capture codecs are various. There is something like DV-NTSC (assuming this is from NTSC country) and alternatively ProRes (any flavour for now).

It comes down to storage: for sure physical discs (as in for data or video) are presumably having an issue on reliability on the long run. Furthermore, DVD video will be an MPEG2-compression, another time consuming process with regards you are coming from FCP 7 (which, as I assume, sets the hardware into the 2010s).

So, H264 (MPEG4 for that matter) and MPEG2 are really time consuming in the creation of a previously recorded master file. FCP 7 can not directly capture in either of these two formats.

So we are looking at the long term storage format you want to utilize for this endeavour. given an optical medium is not preferable under long-term storage aspects and even further if not used as primarily " a storage medium" but a video playback medium (down trade in quality) I would assume with the current HDD / SSD prices you might want to look into this direction.

Also given we are looking at a VHS source there could be DV NTSC or a more valuable option ProRes (422 or HQ) option.

I.e.:

60 minutes of DV NTSC will use about 14GB whereas the same duration in ProRes(HQ) will hog about 33GB of space (each with Stereo PCM). The process will be the same: hook up the VHS to your FCP 7 machine and just chose either capture format.

Any derivates like in H.264 or MPEG2 for DVD you can create off those files selectively whilst retaining (at least in my humble opinion:) a proper archival format.

For the HDD / SSD log term storage: please keep in mind to turn around that data periodically as both types of drives might fail over time (more likely the HDD than the SSD though).

However, with current prices on large HDDs this should not be an issue, a current 20TB drive (~500 US$ more or less) will hold around 570 hrs of SD material in ProRes(HQ). If you go down this road please calculate a second drive into the equation: there is no back-up on one drive only!

I hope this helps, have fun digitizing!

Best


Jo




On 4. May 2023, at 22:28, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Hi --

My plan, as cockeyed as it may seem, but based on the hardware & software that I've got:

The video source is VHS.  It's family stuff, and that's what we used.  (I also have 8mm & 16mm film (Dad was a filmmaker) but right now my concern is the flood of VHS's we have in the closets.  That, and I don't have a film chain.)   :-)

My plan is to hook my VHS deck to my computer running FCP7 and digitize everything into FCP, where it creates Quicktimes.  This process worked well with my entire book of work from WNBC where we had mastering everything to DVCPro -- I digitized everything through FCP and it all now lives on a couple of drives as QTs.

I imagine the h.264 would be an extra (time consuming) step but would save space.  I'm not sure that space will be an issue, so staying with QT and not compressing it would be a good option.

I also have a VHS-to-DVD deck, which is why I asked about the DVD-R option.  But I've also heard that DVD-R isn't particularly archival, so while in the short run it'd be easier to access and play, if the discs are going to die in 3 or 5 years, then yeah, that process would just be a waste of time...

...and I know nothing about blu-ray...

If there are any other options that I'm not considering or aware of, please let me know --

Thank you!

-- Sol


-------------------------------------------------
Sol Fischler
Editor: Image & Sound
914-525-2579


On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 03:24:37 PM EDT, Jo's Mailinglists <lists@filter-media.net> wrote:


Pending the source I am not so sure why _archiving_is recommended here in H.264? I know I am in a thread with Bouke but… QT is a container, H.264 is a compression. 

So Quicktime as a container can hold a lot of different and especially for archival purposes, different compressions.

Again, pending the source…

my 2¢



On 4. May 2023, at 18:59, bouke <bouke@editb.nl> wrote:

QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
(But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy stuff, like QT ref…)

DVD is obsolete…

Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the next 30 years.

Now, where did my latest post go?


Bouke / edit 'B

videotoolshed.com
Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
+31 6 21817248
If you want to send me large files, please use:
https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/

On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Off-topic I know, but:

In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
Thanks!
-- Sol






Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Hi,

So some stuff ahead: VHS is SD - no need to consider Blu-ray for this (that's for HD (mainly).

FCP 7 is nice and capture codecs are various. There is something like DV-NTSC (assuming this is from NTSC country) and alternatively ProRes (any flavour for now).

It comes down to storage: for sure physical discs (as in for data or video) are presumably having an issue on reliability on the long run. Furthermore, DVD video will be an MPEG2-compression, another time consuming process with regards you are coming from FCP 7 (which, as I assume, sets the hardware into the 2010s).

So, H264 (MPEG4 for that matter) and MPEG2 are really time consuming in the creation of a previously recorded master file. FCP 7 can not directly capture in either of these two formats.

So we are looking at the long term storage format you want to utilize for this endeavour. given an optical medium is not preferable under long-term storage aspects and even further if not used as primarily " a storage medium" but a video playback medium (down trade in quality) I would assume with the current HDD / SSD prices you might want to look into this direction.

Also given we are looking at a VHS source there could be DV NTSC or a more valuable option ProRes (422 or HQ) option.

I.e.:

60 minutes of DV NTSC will use about 14GB whereas the same duration in ProRes(HQ) will hog about 33GB of space (each with Stereo PCM). The process will be the same: hook up the VHS to your FCP 7 machine and just chose either capture format.

Any derivates like in H.264 or MPEG2 for DVD you can create off those files selectively whilst retaining (at least in my humble opinion:) a proper archival format.

For the HDD / SSD log term storage: please keep in mind to turn around that data periodically as both types of drives might fail over time (more likely the HDD than the SSD though).

However, with current prices on large HDDs this should not be an issue, a current 20TB drive (~500 US$ more or less) will hold around 570 hrs of SD material in ProRes(HQ). If you go down this road please calculate a second drive into the equation: there is no back-up on one drive only!

I hope this helps, have fun digitizing!

Best


Jo




On 4. May 2023, at 22:28, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Hi --

My plan, as cockeyed as it may seem, but based on the hardware & software that I've got:

The video source is VHS.  It's family stuff, and that's what we used.  (I also have 8mm & 16mm film (Dad was a filmmaker) but right now my concern is the flood of VHS's we have in the closets.  That, and I don't have a film chain.)   :-)

My plan is to hook my VHS deck to my computer running FCP7 and digitize everything into FCP, where it creates Quicktimes.  This process worked well with my entire book of work from WNBC where we had mastering everything to DVCPro -- I digitized everything through FCP and it all now lives on a couple of drives as QTs.

I imagine the h.264 would be an extra (time consuming) step but would save space.  I'm not sure that space will be an issue, so staying with QT and not compressing it would be a good option.

I also have a VHS-to-DVD deck, which is why I asked about the DVD-R option.  But I've also heard that DVD-R isn't particularly archival, so while in the short run it'd be easier to access and play, if the discs are going to die in 3 or 5 years, then yeah, that process would just be a waste of time...

...and I know nothing about blu-ray...

If there are any other options that I'm not considering or aware of, please let me know --

Thank you!

-- Sol


-------------------------------------------------
Sol Fischler
Editor: Image & Sound
914-525-2579


On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 03:24:37 PM EDT, Jo's Mailinglists <lists@filter-media.net> wrote:


Pending the source I am not so sure why _archiving_is recommended here in H.264? I know I am in a thread with Bouke but… QT is a container, H.264 is a compression. 

So Quicktime as a container can hold a lot of different and especially for archival purposes, different compressions.

Again, pending the source…

my 2¢



On 4. May 2023, at 18:59, bouke <bouke@editb.nl> wrote:

QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
(But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy stuff, like QT ref…)

DVD is obsolete…

Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the next 30 years.

Now, where did my latest post go?


Bouke / edit 'B

videotoolshed.com
Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
+31 6 21817248
If you want to send me large files, please use:
https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/

On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Off-topic I know, but:

In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
Thanks!
-- Sol






Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Hi --

My plan, as cockeyed as it may seem, but based on the hardware & software that I've got:

The video source is VHS.  It's family stuff, and that's what we used.  (I also have 8mm & 16mm film (Dad was a filmmaker) but right now my concern is the flood of VHS's we have in the closets.  That, and I don't have a film chain.)   :-)

My plan is to hook my VHS deck to my computer running FCP7 and digitize everything into FCP, where it creates Quicktimes.  This process worked well with my entire book of work from WNBC where we had mastering everything to DVCPro -- I digitized everything through FCP and it all now lives on a couple of drives as QTs.

I imagine the h.264 would be an extra (time consuming) step but would save space.  I'm not sure that space will be an issue, so staying with QT and not compressing it would be a good option.

I also have a VHS-to-DVD deck, which is why I asked about the DVD-R option.  But I've also heard that DVD-R isn't particularly archival, so while in the short run it'd be easier to access and play, if the discs are going to die in 3 or 5 years, then yeah, that process would just be a waste of time...

...and I know nothing about blu-ray...

If there are any other options that I'm not considering or aware of, please let me know --

Thank you!

-- Sol


-------------------------------------------------
Sol Fischler
Editor: Image & Sound
914-525-2579


On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 03:24:37 PM EDT, Jo's Mailinglists <lists@filter-media.net> wrote:


Pending the source I am not so sure why _archiving_is recommended here in H.264? I know I am in a thread with Bouke but… QT is a container, H.264 is a compression. 

So Quicktime as a container can hold a lot of different and especially for archival purposes, different compressions.

Again, pending the source…

my 2¢



On 4. May 2023, at 18:59, bouke <bouke@editb.nl> wrote:

QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
(But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy stuff, like QT ref…)

DVD is obsolete…

Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the next 30 years.

Now, where did my latest post go?


Bouke / edit 'B

videotoolshed.com
Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
+31 6 21817248
If you want to send me large files, please use:
https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/

On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Off-topic I know, but:

In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
Thanks!
-- Sol





Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Pending the source I am not so sure why _archiving_is recommended here in H.264? I know I am in a thread with Bouke but… QT is a container, H.264 is a compression. 

So Quicktime as a container can hold a lot of different and especially for archival purposes, different compressions.

Again, pending the source…

my 2¢



On 4. May 2023, at 18:59, bouke <bouke@editb.nl> wrote:

QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
(But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy stuff, like QT ref…)

DVD is obsolete…

Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the next 30 years.

Now, where did my latest post go?


Bouke / edit 'B

videotoolshed.com
Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
+31 6 21817248
If you want to send me large files, please use:
https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/

On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Off-topic I know, but:

In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
Thanks!
-- Sol





Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Sounds good -- thank you!

-- Sol

-------------------------------------------------
Sol Fischler
Editor: Image & Sound
914-525-2579


On Thursday, May 4, 2023 at 01:00:07 PM EDT, bouke <bouke@editb.nl> wrote:


QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
(But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy stuff, like QT ref…)

DVD is obsolete…

Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the next 30 years.

Now, where did my latest post go?


Bouke / edit 'B

videotoolshed.com
Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
+31 6 21817248
If you want to send me large files, please use:
https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/

On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Off-topic I know, but:

In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
Thanks!
-- Sol




Re: [Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

QuickTime is NOT obsolete, QT player is, but the file format is not.
(But Mp4 and QT are VERY much alike if you don't want the fancy stuff, like QT ref…)

DVD is obsolete…

Archive to H264 in either QT or Mp4 and you'll be safe for the next 30 years.

Now, where did my latest post go?


Bouke / edit 'B

videotoolshed.com
Van Oldenbarneveltstraat 33
6512 AS Nijmegen, the Netherlands
+31 6 21817248
If you want to send me large files, please use:
https://videotoolshed.wetransfer.com/

On 4 May 2023, at 18:53, Sol Fischler via groups.io <sol.fischler=yahoo.com@groups.io> wrote:

Off-topic I know, but:

In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
Thanks!
-- Sol




[Avid-L2] OFF-TOPIC: Archiving Memories

Off-topic I know, but:

In 2023, how does everyone archive their family home movies & tapes?  I'm interested in both digital and physical possible formats...
I know both Quicktime and DVD-R are obsolete, but are they still viable, and what are the alternatives?
Thanks!
-- Sol



Tuesday, May 2, 2023

Re: [Avid-L2] MC GPU acceleration - Fact or fantasy?

There was a well written resource floating around about 5-7 years ago I cannot find at the moment…hold the phone, found it.  Was in a blog post by Chris Bove.



Suffice to say AVID does indeed use GPU acceleration, but maybe not as easily measured.  Not sure how much has changed with the shift to full 64bit and modern interface.

IIRC it GPU processing was also about handling Media Composer's "real time" functions (RT Playback, AMA).  I would love to hear anyone chime in on this from AVID on the tech side.

The modern versions seem to be VERY memory hungry.

My .02,

Dave Hogan
Burbank, CA

On May 2, 2023, at 9:45 AM, Gowanus Canal <gowanuscanalstinks@gmail.com> wrote:

MC's GPU utilization is limited. It is mostly reserved for 3D based FX. Most of MC's task are CPU bound. 



DQS


On May 2, 2023, at 11:20 AM, Karl Knowles <tech@knowlesvideo.com> wrote:

I recently installed a Dell T3660 with a 12900K processor and an Nvidia RTX A4000, running MC 2022.12.1.

I'm not seeing any significant use of GPU processing at any point.  For example, rendering video mixdowns shows 100% CPU usage in Performance Monitor while only 5% GPU use.

I can't find any information on tweaking, tuning, tricking the system to get more work from the GPU.

Thoughts or suggestions?

Cheers,

Karl Knowles

Re: [Avid-L2] MC GPU acceleration - Fact or fantasy?

MC's GPU utilization is limited. It is mostly reserved for 3D based FX. Most of MC's task are CPU bound. 



DQS


On May 2, 2023, at 11:20 AM, Karl Knowles <tech@knowlesvideo.com> wrote:

I recently installed a Dell T3660 with a 12900K processor and an Nvidia RTX A4000, running MC 2022.12.1.

I'm not seeing any significant use of GPU processing at any point.  For example, rendering video mixdowns shows 100% CPU usage in Performance Monitor while only 5% GPU use.

I can't find any information on tweaking, tuning, tricking the system to get more work from the GPU.

Thoughts or suggestions?

Cheers,

Karl Knowles

[Avid-L2] MC GPU acceleration - Fact or fantasy?

I recently installed a Dell T3660 with a 12900K processor and an Nvidia RTX A4000, running MC 2022.12.1.

I'm not seeing any significant use of GPU processing at any point.  For example, rendering video mixdowns shows 100% CPU usage in Performance Monitor while only 5% GPU use.

I can't find any information on tweaking, tuning, tricking the system to get more work from the GPU.

Thoughts or suggestions?

Cheers,

Karl Knowles
_._,_._,_

Groups.io Links:

You receive all messages sent to this group.

View/Reply Online (#136152) | Reply To Group | Reply To Sender | Mute This Topic | New Topic
Your Subscription | Contact Group Owner | Unsubscribe [administrator242.death@blogger.com]

_._,_._,_

Monday, May 1, 2023

[Avid-L2] Avid-L2 FAQ #guidelines-notice

         Welcome to the Avid-L2

                   FAQ!

AVID-L II Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

 

Subscribing (or unsubscribing) to the Avid-L2

Send an e-mail message to:

Avid-L2+subscribe@groups.io

 

Or, to unsubscribe, send e-mail to:

Avid-L2+unsubscribe@groups.io

 

Note that by subscribing, you are acknowledging that you have read

and understand this FAQ  See below for additional detail.

 

Your options for member types  can be reviewed on the group's home page.     At any time, you can view messages on the web site for this group itself

 

Membership types are Indvidual messages, Digests of 12 messages each, Daily Summary, special announcements only, or no mail at all to use the web portal only.

 

To change your member type, visit the group s.io web site and modify your membership type in the check boxes provided

 

Policies

 Despite what email address or handle you use, you should register as a Yahoo user to participate in the Avid-L2, for access to the web features of this group.  

Subscribers should set up an account with their legal first and last names, then send the request to join. 

 This is a Moderated list, and all subscription requests must be approved by the moderator(s).  I, please include your first and last name in the subscription request to the moderator when you request to join.

 

As always, Groups.io and the moderators of this list are not responsible for the use third parties may make of information you have made publicly available in this or any other public

forum.  Please take a look at the applicable  Yahoo Terms of Use and Privacy

Policy for more information about public  information and forums.

 

Off Topic Filtering.   Part of the interest of the Avid-L2 is it's range

of topics.  If you are posting an Off-topic thread,  please preface the

subject with  OT:  Use the colon after the letters. 

 Email filters and rules can be used by subscribers to move Off Topic posts to where ever they would like in their email organization by using a rule/filter with Sender of: Avid-l2@yahoogroups.com  and subject contains  OT: .

 

The Avid-L is a helpful yet rough around the edges crowd. Topics that are not welcome are religion, politics, and other disruptive topics that interfere with the operation of the list.  Moderation of these topics will be quick,  so simply put-  Let's all just play nice 

 

Commercial Posts must be prefaced with [commercial] in the subject or they will be rejected.   

Jobs should have #job in their header, and press releases should have [pr] in their header

 

Background

 

Avid-L was established in 1994 at Calvin College by Steven Koster.

It was created to be a forum for Avid users to meet, discuss, and share

information.

 

 Avid-L quickly grew into the premiere on-line users group for

professional film and video editors. It was one of the earliest examples

of an Internet community, allowing hundreds of editors worldwide to

share their experiences and expertise with their peers. There was no

better place for a professional Avid editor to get such wealth of

informed professional advice.

At various times, individual subscribers volunteered services to the

group. Searchable archives were maintained by Germany's Berlin Users

Group as well as the UIUC. A tips & tricks list was posted by Andy

Birkhead of Innovative Edit. Wes Plate, a longtime contributor, not only

shared key techniques on his Web site, he also created a photo gallery

for members' portraits.

 

In 1997, several subscribers began a tradition of meeting in person at

the NAB trade show in Las Vegas. The first gatherings were organized by Jaime Fowler. In 1999,

Avid Technology itself began sponsoring these gatherings as an exclusive reception and seminar for Avid-L members only.  In 2002, this changed to the "Avid Users Group" meeting.

 

By 1999, Avid-L boasted over 1600 subscribers, exhibiting a true

international scope with over 300  international members. The community

included participants from a wide variety of well-known corporate

organizations in broadcasting, technical, and content creation fields,

as well as and  multiple local TV stations, colleges, and universities.

 

In 2000, Avid-L joined AvidProNet.com, and then, in 2002, was integrated

Into Avid.com.  

 

In 2005 Due to problems with signal to noise ratio and abusive posters, the Avid-L2 was formed. A year later the Avid-L was discontinued by Avid.

 

At the middle of 2006, the L2 has around 1100 members, with plenty of "lurker only" members who simply use the web version of the list.  The L2 is spam-free, by moderation and with Groups.io’s tools and will remain that way.  

 

In 2019,  the Group has migrated to Groups,io from the previous Yahoo engine-   the Groups.io page  maintains the complete Avid-L2 archive.    The original Avid-L archive has been lost to the history of the interwebz.

 

Welcome, and Enjoy!

 

Extras!

With a Groups.io account tied to your subscription to the Avid-L2,  you can use the web features of the Group.

 

Calendar  Various Avid events are in the Calender.  If you have an event you'd like posted,  pull down and fill out the Calendar event request and send it to any Moderator

 

Database - The database area contains Avid Feature requests,  Help Wanted,  Freelance Listings and For Sale sections.  Feel free to add your listings to any of these areas.  Job Postings will remain up for 1 month.   Please date all postings to the database areas, being pertinent is a good way to be.

 

Files-  The files section contains various sundry files, including the latest Avid release notes.  Check back often for changes.

 

Photos -  Pictures of your Avid setup are welcome, or pictures relating to a post you need a photo to explain.  Photos will be posted after moderator approval.  Who knows, your picture might grace the front page for a while.

 

Links-  Various helpful links, including direct links to Avid CPR releases can be found here, also the link to the archives.

 

JDS

 

_._,_._,_

Groups.io Links:

You receive all messages sent to this group.

View/Reply Online (#136151) | Reply To Group | Reply To Sender | Mute This Topic | New Topic
Mute #guidelines-notice
Your Subscription | Contact Group Owner | Unsubscribe [administrator242.death@blogger.com]

_._,_._,_