[rescue] Rescued O2
Joshua Boyd
jdboyd at jdboyd.net
Fri Aug 15 11:02:39 CDT 2008
On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 10:15:42PM -0700, Curious George wrote:
> > I don't know that there was every
> > anything that made great use of the hardware. As I
> > understand it, there were basically three choices for
> > editing software: the included Movie
> > Editor; Premiere 4.2; and Jaleo O2. The last program was
> > extremely expensive and I believe it only did uncompressed video.
>
> I'd be happy if I could just *reliably* digitize video, etc.
OK. There are two potential issues. First, it sounds like you have a
R10k or R12k. Some of the R10ks were incapable of doing this reliably.
The second issue is that the O2 is a bit finicky about sync, so people
using non-professional VCRs tended to benefit from using a time base
corrector, which describes most pro quality capture systems of the day.
Actually, that still describes a lot of pro quality captures systems if
the newish gear at work is anything to go by.
> > Premiere 4.2 was absolutely terrible. The included software is
> > what it is, which is to say very basic.
>
> Yes, that seems to also be a "given". :< I note how crappy
> the SunVideo software is, the video software that came with
> my VWS320, etc. It;s as if they wanted to say "See?!! You
> *could* do these kind of things!!!" but really didn't want
> to spend much effort ($$$) proving that point! (cripes, then
> why even bother if you aren't going to exploit the unique
> abilities of your hardware over that of "beige computers")
I think the Irix included software is a cut above those two examples.
> > Fow awhile I had dreams of writing my own software to
> > maximize the O2,
> > but of course writing good GUIs is always hard, which is
> > what kept me
> > from getting anywhere. Now I can see some better starting
> > points (on
> > the surface, OpenME looks like it could be reasonably
> > stripped down to
> > just a GUI then built back up again), but I lack the time
> > and energy.
>
> Easier and quicker to just move to a platform that does what
> you need *now*.
There is no free software that does what I want now. The commercial
software that appears to come the closest is in the neighborhood of
$100k, as a turnkey package including hardware.
Besides, I make my money writing code, not editing, so it makes sense
for me to think about writing my own software, even if it doesn't make
sense to actually do it.
> > You could always clear the password by sticking the disk in another
> > machine. Linux can do the job, although I think you might have to
> > custom compile a kernel to do so.
>
> I don;t run Linux. Solaris or NetBSD are the only choices I have
> readily available...
I see. It might be possible to do it on NetBSD, but I don't know. I'm
pretty certain Solaris is right out.
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