Paul Houle wrote:

>     Sound is the most important variable to control;  people 
> will tolerate bad video if the sound is good, but will tune out 
> if they can't hear what's being said.

I agree. This was my first reaction to the Wikimania 
presentations.  But when you have an external microphone, perhaps 
more than one, you also get the problem that you might have 
connected the wrong one, or forgot to switch it on.  How do you 
make sure the mike is on, before 3 minutes of the presentation 
have already been lost?  Soundcheck, testing, testing.

>     Don't screw around with low-end cameras based on flash 
> memory;  the best bet you'll get on the cheap end is a camera 
> that uses miniDV tapes;  tmost miniDV cameras have firewire 
> ports that you can use to read the video into a computer for 
> editing.  You can certainly get something OK for under $1000, 
> but there are some panasonic cameras around $3000 that are quite 
> a bit better, particularly if you're shooting under low light 
> conditions.

This is easy to say, but doesn't play well with the massive 
collaboration of Wikipedia.  We want hundreds of volunteers to 
take photos of flowers and buildings, and they can do this with 
very cheap digital cameras.  For birds, folk dances and vehicles 
we should encourage video.  But if it requires an investment of 
$3000, it will not become a mass movement.  This is the equation 
we have to solve.



-- 
  Lars Aronsson ([email protected])
  Aronsson Datateknik - http://aronsson.se

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