A Look Inside T-Mobile’s Emergency Response Teams
Big truck big truck I got to ride in a big truck
Big truck big truck I got to ride in a big truck
The new edition of my essential guide to Apple Watch is now out, with a bunch of new material.
I spent the weekend photographing areas of Seattle using two of the top Android camera phones for a new CNET article.
I talked to the head of Google's Pixel camera team to get a deep dive into the Pixel 10 camera technologies.
Oooooh: espressomap is a simple site that uses Google Maps to identify excellent espresso venues in North America. Type your zip code to find out what’s near you!
My friend Karen pointed me to What Kind of Coffee Are You? No surprise: You Are an Espresso At your best, you are: straight shooting, ambitious, and energetic. At your worst, you are: anxious and high strung. You drink coffee when: anytime you’re not sleeping. Your caffeine addiction level: high. What Kind of Coffee Are ...
At Macworld Expo in January, I delivered a session called “Graduate from iMovie to Final Cut Pro” as part of the Users Conference track. I thought it went pretty well, especially since public speaking doesn’t come naturally to me, but I’m working on it. As I was leaving, one man asked if the presentation would ...
Macworld has published my review of Cinematize 2 Pro, a utility for extracting video and audio content from a DVD. The non-pro version also extracts content, but without as many options, such as subtitle extraction (in a variety of formats). Click here to read the full review. When you burn a DVD from an application ...
Because I live in a great, coffee-abundant city, I can be a bit disparaging toward our hometown heroes, Starbucks. I have nothing against the company, and they rightly deserve credit for pushing up the quality of espresso in America. But I find their coffee to be just okay. One of the company’s biggest advantages is ...
When Steve Jobs declared 2005 the “year of high-definition video,” there wasn’t much available to shoot consumer HD, and the only HDV camera at the time (the Sony HDR-FX1) cost $4,000. Now it’s 2007, and the number of HDV camcorders has gotten larger while the prices have started to come down. EventDV.net has published an ...
Scott Kirsner (of CinemaTech fame) has an article in today’s New York Times about several people who are making money (anywhere from a few hundred dollars to $25,000+) by posting their videos on sites that pay for popularity: All the World’s a Stage (That Includes the Internet). When their video reaches a set number of ...
BoingBoing points to the Spiderbrace Video Camera Stabilizer, a $70 device that attaches to your video camera to stabilize the image. Digital video camcorders have opened up a whole new world of creative possibilities for today’s independent filmmaker. However, despite all its advantages, the DV camcorder has presented videographers with one obvious problem: the absence ...
Although I devote a section of the iMovie VQS to lighting, I really don’t know much more than the basics of lighting a scene. It’s one of those areas of shooting where you can fall into a rabbit hole and get lost (and really enjoy being lost). It’s also an area that is usually immediately ...
Adam Nielson has taken over blogging duties at camcorderinfo.com, and starts today with two interesting posts. In the first, it appears that Sony’s “Full HD 1080” logo that appears on many of the company’s TVs is, as I suspected, marketing fluff. Although one would think that “Full 1080” might refer to 1080p (progressive, full-frame playback, ...