Category Archives: Geek stuff

A new year and a new computer

I need to upgrade my laptop because it’s grown a little long in the tooth for my current needs.

I spend most of my time editing photographs using Aperture 3.0, and with the new 64-bit OS and my ever-growing photo collection, I am taxing the limits of my old Macbook Pro. It’s a 2.33 Ghz model max’d out with 3GB of RAM, 256MB of VRAM and a 7200 RPM 500GB hard drive. But I really need more RAM, and the extra screen real estate and faster processor is going to be a welcome change. But there was a glitch…

I have an ExpressCard34 slot in my old Mac, but sadly the new 15″ models have removed it in favor of an SD card slot. Meh. But I just discovered a little-known fact: the 17″ unibody Macbook Pro actually still has the slot. Now I can upgrade and still use my Very Large Array of Disks (my acronym: “Vlad”), which has an eSATA connection by using the eSATA expresscard adapter that I have.

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Aperture Library Repair Service

I am an Apple Aperture user, and have been ever since version 1.0 was released. Aperture is a terrific tool which is responsible in many ways for the great efficiencies I have achieved in my photo production. It allows me to work quickly and accurately, gives me a good number of editing tools, both for individual photos and en masse changes.

I currently have close to 100,000 photos in my main Aperture library on my studio computer, and I have anywhere from 10-20,000 photos on my Macbook Pro library, which includes my family pictures.

Every once in a while, though, Aperture has a hiccup that causes me trouble. Most notably, I’ve had cases where I’ve tried to move projects between computers, upgraded hard drive, or even upgraded the OS X on my computers. In these cases, I’ve had to perform surgery on my Aperture installation to avoid doing a complete rebuild of my library. Once I did try to do a complete rebuild, and my computer was tied up for almost 30 hours.

The symptoms most commonly associated with Aperture database problems are:

  • Incorrect or corrupt thumbnail images
  • Error messages about missing Master files
  • Inability to export versions
  • Inability to locate Master files
  • Errors ordering prints and/or books

So, I have developed a set of tools that I regularly use to diagnose and repair my Aperture library and projects. I can help you to do this, too. If you have internet access and are running OS X 10.5 (Leopard) or OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard), I can use OS X “Screen Sharing” to access your computer and do this remotely. Most database and library repairs take less than an hour, and many can be completed in a matter of minutes.

If you’d like to hire me to do this for you, please contact me via email so that we can discuss your situation. The initial consultation is free. Up to 1 hour of repair work performed remotely over the Internet is $100. More complicated repairs will be estimated in advance.

Good luck, and happy shooting!

Steve

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Firestore FS-4HD Is Fixed (Sort Of…)

I use the excellent Firestore device sometimes when I’m shooting video with my Canon XL2. It provides up to 7 hours of runtime (along with the excellent PowerBagJunior battery) and allows me to quickly edit video without dealing with tape.

However, a few months ago I noticed that an update to Final Cut Pro (or maybe Quicktime) broke my workflow. The Firestore segments its recorded video into <2GB chunks (which is about 9 minutes of video). This isn’t much of a hassle because it’s easy to drop them all into a Final Cut Pro timeline and have them automatically line up. But at some point a few months ago, I noticed that there were very short (1-2 frame) gaps appearing in the audio at each join in the timeline. Needless to say, this was very disconcerting. Try as I might, I could not get anybody interested in this (not Focus, not Apple…nobody). I could not believe it was my problem.

So this week it bit me again, and this time I decided to revert to my old debugging chops from Back In The Day when I used to be a fearsome software coder with a reputation for leaving no bug unturned (or something like that).

Suffice it to say, this was difficult to figure out, but I’ve finally gotten to the bottom of the problem, found a solution (albeit a clunky one), and figured out how to get a few more years of use out of my Firestore.

In a nutshell, the Firestore is recording my Canon XL2’s “24P” video at the “drop frame” rate of 23.98 frames per second. Quicktime Pro’s player says “that’s fine” and plays it seamlessly, as do most other Quicktime applications. But Final Cut Pro sees the 1-2 frame gap in the audio. Why? Because the actual framerate of “24P” dropframe video is 23.976 frames per second, not 23.98. And for some reason, the Quicktime applications don’t seem to care. But Final Cut Pro is obviously far more fussy, and assumes the Quicktime file is 100% accurate, and in this case, it’s wrong. That’s because the audio is actually 23.976 frames per second (4/1000 of a second shorter) than the video, which is 23.98 frames per second. Over the space of the 9+ minutes of a segment of video on the Firestore, that means the audio actually ends a fraction of a second earlier than the video, causing the gap.

So, the right way to fix this problem would be for the Firestore’s manufacturer to fix this bug in their device. I’m not too sure they’d be interested in doing that because they’ve since moved on to newer Firestore devices. However, I wonder if this bug is also in their newer devices. Hmm…

Anyway, here’s the clunky fix I found. There’s a nice little Quicktime player application called QT Sync (get it here: http://www.qtsync.com/qtsync.php) that is capable of directly editing a Quicktime movie file and changing the frame rate. This is a non-destructive change, as this just changes a notation in the file itself. However, now the movie file has two extra blank frames at the end. So when you drag it into Final Cut Pro’s timeline, you have to carefully trim off the last two video and audio frames.

I hope this proves helpful.

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I am moving again

My lovely place on Marsten has become no longer the right place for me for a number of reasons. So I found a new place that’s about 150 yards south of this location. It’s a wonderful, funky old building that suits my needs wonderfully well. I’ll be packing up soon, so pardon my tardiness in returning phone calls and emails if that happens!

Wish me luck…there is a lot of stuff to move! :-)






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Some more lovely 5D Mark II video…

Was playing around with the 5D Mark II at a Mothers’ Day gathering at my sister’s house today and shot some nice video with it. I used the 35/1.4L and 85/1.2L, both wide open using exposure lock. I killed off the audio track in Quicktime Pro, conformed the video to 24fps (slowing it slightly) using Cinema Tools, then re-compressed it to 720P at about 2800bps using DV Kitchen.

Make sure your web browser window is stretched out as big as you can get it.

If you don’t know what any of that means, just watch and enjoy. ;-)

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