For all the people I know who own cameras, few make movies. I think it has something to do with lack of time/interest. Pity. Anyway, for those of you who are interested, I bet your camera has a video mode. Try it out. You paid for the feature, might as well see if it was worth it.

After making a few movies I thought I might share a few basic things I have learned along the way.

Filming:
Don’t use zoom. When you zoom in, camera shake is more noticible. Resulting footage reminds one of Blair Witch Project. Also, digital zoom lowers the resolution of you footage, so the zoomed in bits look more pixelated.
Pan slowly. We have a lot more perifial vision than a camera does, so if you pan at the rate that you would turn your head, the scene appears to move too quickly.
Tripods are your friend. I carry a small 4-inch one in my purse all the time.

Lighting:
If you can’t afford nice expensive studio lights, putting a small light behind your camera works wonders. It will illuminate the whole scene evenly.

I’m also going to start posting movies and writing about technique. I think about film too much and I’m hoping that if I write it down, I can get it out of my head.

haha, i just got hit

[11:20] thehatsofwrath: i say, old bean, have you seen my hat?
[11:22] thehatsofwrath: hello!
[11:23] Karebearinmind: hi!
[11:23] Karebearinmind: er, who is this
[11:23] Karebearinmind: not that i’m opposed to talking to strangers
[11:23] Karebearinmind: despite what my mommy says
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Ok, so I know I’m a bit behind in the news, but tribe got purchased by Cisco. I am surprised and saddended by the impending death of tribe. Tribe has had a tumultious past, with the CEO’s leaving, people hating the new everything, and the CEO’s returning. For all this talk about the awesomeness of virb (more on that later) tribe should have been the myspace killer.

A ‘tribe’ is simply a group with a forum, events calendar, photos. Your personal landing page is a smorgesboard of information–stats, friends, friends’ blog entries, photos, etc etc. My favorite piece of info is the prominently displayed randomly selected photo from one of my friends. I can easily drag and drop modules, edit their titles, and hide the ones I don’t want to see. I can hook in multiple feeds to my profile (ex: jumpcut movies, flickr photos and blog entries). When I am looking at someone’s profile, within 4 degrees I can see all the ways I am connected to that person. (Facebook used to have this feature, but it’s nowhere to be found)

All these lovely features aside, the best part about tribe is the community. Tribe is pretty much the online hangout of the artsy-burningman-alternative-lifestyle crowd. If I wanted to find something hip and underground-ish to do on any given evening, I went to tribe. If I wanted to find belly dancing lessons or welding classes, I went to tribe. If I wanted to reconnect with someone I met at a party , well, if s/he didn’t have a tribe profile that was the end of that relationship.

Unfortunately, their userbase is not that big. In some ways I am very glad that tribe never picked up the myspace types (that bubbling cestpool of trashy preteens and spammers). Though I am happy for the employees and the investors, I am deeply saddended by this purchase. Tribe has had a rocky past, so maybe this is just another bump in the road. Cisco may prove me wrong and turn tribe around. One can only hope.

Thoughts?

For $50 a month (after paying $250 the first month) you can buy a program that automatically uploads your video onto multiple video sharing sites. I would not recommend looking at their site as it may blind you or make you cry. It is the web page version of an infomercial, complete with”order now” special deals and too many exclaimation points. I’m a little thrown off by the fact that this product is useful “even if you don’t have any video, and don’t own a camera” [paraphrase]. I don’t think many video sharing sites support audio files. However, the premise is simple and is very useful for those who have no loyalty to any particular video site. You pick your video, fill out one form, and then you can walk away knowing that you’re video will pop up on vimeo, vsocial, zippyvideos, bolt, among others. (don’t think jumpcut is included. :( )

It’s absolutely ridiculous that they are asking for that much money. It’s just an app that takes your chosen file, and runs a script that fills in the necessary info for each of the upload pages for each video sites. There is nothing that is technologically impressive. I’m tempted to write my own and undercut their price. (mmm, open source…)

Perhaps what one pays for is maintainence. After all, the upload pages may change, and the company may have to alter some variables to make the product work. I wonder if the product uploads your video to their servers and then uploads to the other sites (what I would expect if I were paying $50 a month), or if it just directly uploads to the sites (costing the consumer time and bandwith).

I would never pay that much for this type of service but I hope the site gets a lot of sales and does well for itself. In a few months time there will be others and the price will only go down.

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