[videoblogging] Re: Shooting In Public

2010-06-10 Thread jdlasica
Coming to this late, but these articles may be of interest:

The rules around capturing public performances
 
http://www.socialbrite.org/2009/08/16/the-rules-around-capturing-public-performances/

What is off-limits to a documentary filmmaker?

http://www.socialbrite.org/2009/04/27/what-are-the-limits-of-documentary-filmmaking/
 
Guide to shooting photos in public

http://www.socialbrite.org/2009/04/10/guide-to-shooting-photos-in-public/
 
Your rights as a photographer 

http://www.socialbrite.org/2009/04/05/the-photographers-right/

cheers,

jd lasica



[videoblogging] Re: My Story

2010-06-10 Thread mgmoon
Great story David. Thanks for sharing.

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, David Jones david.jo...@... wrote:

 Ok, I'll lead by example as I normally do, here is my video blogging story:
 
 Hi, I'm Dave Jones from Sydney Australia. I started a niche
 electronics engineering video blog in April 2009.
 http://www.eevblog.com
 and
 http://www.youtube.com/user/EEVblog
 
 I wanted to differentiate myself from boring text blogs, and figured
 it would be fun to have a regular video blog about electronics. As far
 as I could tell no one else had ever attempted one, so I gave it a go
 with a crusty old 320x240 webcam in my study. No script, no idea, no
 name, I just did a talking head blog and reviewed a few products. I
 knew the result was crap, but I posted it on my personal Youtube
 channel and announced on an electronics Usenet group anyway figuring
 you have to start somewhere.
 I had some positive feedback and advice from the few dozen views I
 got, like ditch the study and film it in my lab. I also asked for name
 suggestions.
 
 The 2nd one was in the lab and was greeted with more positive feedback.
 I switched from the webcam to my old Canon MV700i PAL DV tape
 camcorder with internal mic.
 
 By the 3rd or 4th episode I had a basic Wordpress blog page with
 embedded Youtube videos on my personal website. Still no script, no
 idea, and no name. I could not come up with a better name, so it
 remained the Electronics Engineering Video Blog, or EEVblog for short.
 I would later figure out that name and branding can be quite important
 to get right up front! I was kind of lucky in this respect, EEVblog
 now works well for me as a brand.
 I also switched to a dedicated Youtube channel.
 
 It soon became clear that it was slowly gaining in popularity, and I
 experimented with various audio and video settings.
 I also realised that a lot of people were finding me via Youtube
 searches, and it was important to have a dedicated topic for each
 episode instead of the mixed bag of stuff I had in each blog. i.e.
 people didn't want to sit through 5 minutes of other stuff to get to
 the topic they found on the search. That was an important change I
 thought.
 
 I soon got complaints that I didn't have my own domain name, so I got
 eevblog.com and moved the Wordpress account over. At this point I had
 a name, a brand, a slogan (An off-the-cuff video blog about
 electronics..), and a silly photo people recognising the blog by.
 
 I came to realise how important sound was to a blog, so a I bought a
 cheap $50 2nd hand DV tape camcorder which had an external mic input
 and got a $30 shotgun mic. This got rid of the tape noise and improved
 the blog a lot, made it much more watchable.
 I was still shooting in 640x480 and experimenting with widescreen. I
 was using VideoStudio X2 edit software and was limited to the 10minute
 Youtube limit. Many of my blogs were in two parts because of this.
 Lots of heavy editing required to fit inside 10 minutes sometimes!
 
 I was not advertising the blog in any way but it seemed to just keep
 growing with people finding me by Google or Youtube searches.
 
 Somewhere along the line I added some Adsense text ads and they
 started to work like they had on my other web sites at the time.
 
 I also added a user BBS style forum and that has really taken off.
 Almost 1200 members, over 7000 posts and 600 topics. The EEVblog has
 really turned into a quite a decent user community.
 
 By Blog #42 I switched to a Sanyo Xacti HD-1010 camcorder and started
 to shoot in HD as Youtube now supported HD content.
 This blog was a turning point because it went semi-viral with 40,000
 hits in a day or two via Boing Boing, and then Youtube emailed me an
 offer to become a Partner. That took a month or so, and then I had ads
 on my Youtube videos, and no more 10 minute limitation.
 
 Editing HD was much slower than SD, but I persisted (and discussed
 this on this group) and it is now working pretty well, I edit directly
 on the 1280x720 MP4 files from the Xacti camera. I have since switched
 to VideoStudio X3 edit software and render in 1280x720 MPEG2 which I
 then convert to 1280x720 MP4 with Handbrake which is uploaded to
 Youtube. Somewhere along the line I got the PodPress plugin for
 Wordpress and started producing at first a 320x240 podcast version but
 then switched to a 480x272 16:9 widescreen version.
 I came to realise how important it was to get listed in iTunes and
 have a podcast version and an RSS feed (via Google Feedburner). About
 a 1/3rd of my audience now watch via the podcast version. The rest of
 my audience are split about 50/50 between Youtube subscribers and my
 Wordpess blog.
 I also do an MP3 version for my drive time blogs that many like to
 listen to instead of watching the video.
 
 I experimented with a live show and Ustream, and once I get over a few
 technical hurdles, that might be a regular fixture too. I had at least
 70 people tune in to my first live chat session, not 

Re: [videoblogging] My Story

2010-06-10 Thread Surag Ramachandran
Thanks, Dave. That was a totally interesting and inspiring read. 
When people are asked to share their story, generally everyone assumes that it 
is a success story. In my case, I am getting a lot of viewers for my web series 
and I make some money out of it. However, I do not consider the number of views 
or amount of money as a quality parameter.  I know I have to improve a lot in 
different areas. My videos still got the views because I think, web series 
world is different.
I wanted to make zero budget web series with the help of my handycam and 
laptop. I started thinking about it during October 2009. I found that blip.tv 
is a good way to host a web series, distribute it, and make money out of it. 
There are other ways to do these things, but let me share my blip story as I 
have experienced only that.
Unlike Youtube, blip.tv puts ads to any video episode you upload. However, they 
like only episodic contents and not unrelated videos. Revenue sharing is 50:50. 
That is, blip takes 50% share and gives the rest 50% share to the video 
creator. Revenue started appearing after the views reached the count of 800 or 
so. Blip considers one view from one IP address. That is, tricks like 
refreshing many times, won’t increase the number of views. Another fact is that 
the views from US gather more revenue.  I am based in India and when my friends 
and fans located in India see my web series, it increases the view count but 
not much the revenue.
As I wanted to do a zero budget web series, I wrote the script, did the 
direction, edited the videos, and even acted in all roles JI chose office 
politics as my subject. I titled my web series as Bose is always right. It is 
one of the earliest web series in India. Bose is a common name in India and is 
pronounced like the way we pronounce Boss. There is a boss whose name is Bose, 
an employee who does not have any name, an HR person whose name is Helmet and a 
driver whose name is Speed. The first episode premiered on November 1, 2009 at 
http://surag.blip.tv. To begin with, there were some views and less money. 
Though it told a big story, each episode too was independent as I dreamt one of 
them will become viral and will gather attention.
My plan was to complete the first season with 20 episodes. I was not gathering 
any extraordinary views till 13th episode and I felt normal was boring to 
people. The web series did not have any good lighting or sound techniques. The 
characters like cab driver who ferry employees were familiar to Indian audience 
only. The official life of these characters, though exaggerated to some extent 
to get a humor touch, did not gather much international audience. I then made 
the mistake of catering to everyone. I introduced an extra terrestrial 
character and my insistence on zero budget meant the character had just a mask 
and a jacket to look extra terrestrial! 
I uploaded the 14th episode with this extraterrestrial character and the next 
day just checked the view statistics. To my surprise, in a single day, it 
crossed all the views I had for my last 13 episodes. I initially thought there 
was some mistake in the system. Then I searched for my web series in the search 
engines. Well, I found that my web series was seen by a lot of people because 
someone did not like it and tweeted about it. It was tweeted and retweeted by 
many people, it was blogged and reblogged by many others, and it was spread 
across the world through social network sites, mails, and so on. People were 
curious to know why the person communicating about my web series to them did 
not like it. Yes, it became viral though not the way I would have liked it. I 
got international views and more views meant more money.
I understood the power of Web 2.0. I understood that online video was 
different. No one would send you the ticket of the movie they did not like. But 
everyone will send you the link of the web series they did not like and would 
want you to have a look at it. After some days the trend seemed to change. I 
got comments and mails across the world from people who started to like my web 
series. They did find some positives. They congratulated me as I was doing 
everything alone. They felt my contribution from India was needed as it was 
different from other web series from West. They felt my web series reflected 
some of the situations they encounter in their work place.
As decided early, I did my season finale with 20th episode on March 8, 2010. It 
was a fascinating journey and I was very thrilled to accomplish something that 
I always wanted to. Yes, just because it got some views doesn’t mean that I 
should stop from improving. I will do a season 2 or do another web series and 
this time I will go out to shoot rather than confining most of the action to 
indoors. Yes, I will remember the advices that I gathered from the recent 
thread of discussion on “Shooting in Public”. J
Cheers,
Surag Ramachandran
Bose is always right: 

[videoblogging] Re: 720p HD and video editing on the iPhone 4

2010-06-10 Thread calebjc
The Sprint HTC Evo looks like it's also 720p, two camera, and duel flash too. 
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-20004833-94.html

Any word on a Verizon competitor in the vlogphone category this summer?

I know I may sound old, but the pace of smart phone innovation is staggeringly 
fast right now and makes it hard to buy!!!


--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, elbowsofdeath st...@... wrote:

 OK so finally the iPhone reaches a stage where it can start to live up to our 
 expectations for what a powerful mobile device should be able to offer for 
 video.
 
 Obviously not the only device in the world that can do these things but if 
 Apple have designed the editing app very well and the camera quality is good 
 enough, it should be quite a lovely experience.
 
 I held off from getting a 3GS and stayed with my no-video 3G iphone, so Im 
 really looking forward to upgrading - Ive long missed the video that the 
 Nokia N95 offered me before I got the iphone, but not the UI  workflow of 
 Nokia etc phones, and now I should finally be able to have a much better 
 device on all fronts. 
 
 I look forward to some clever video editing capabilities on the iPad too at 
 some point, but it may take some time for this to be done really well.





Re: [videoblogging] Re: My Story

2010-06-10 Thread David Jones
You're welcome :)
I hope it encourages other people to share their story.
I'm actually thinking about doing a whole series of video blog
tutorials and how to get started, what are the best low cost tools to
use, how to get audio and lighting right, editing, posting etc. As
there doesn't really seem to be much out there on a good step-by-step
guide to setting up and producing a video blog (at least none that
I've found satisfying).
It's just a matter of finding the time!

Dave.

On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 at 5:14 AM, Marguerita
marguerita.mcma...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Dave,

 I just don't have the words to thank you enough for this post!

 I am just starting out (well, 18 months into using video) and still 
 desperately trying to figure things out and learn.

 Your details and timeline are great! I am just now thinking about a better 
 camera and better sound and your progression is a wonderful guideline - I'd 
 have paid money for it - THANK YOU!

 In my niche, story is everything, starting with why and then how. 
 There's a great TED talk about it by Simon Sinek.

 I am keeping this digest and referring to it again and again. Good for you 
 with your BoingBoing shout-out and YT partnering and your progression - I aim 
 to follow your footsteps and enjoy learning from you.

 On thing that has held me back a bit has been my fear of losing my dial-up 
 viewers, esp. if I make HD vids, but I just checked my analytics and see that 
 only 4% of my viewers come at my blog on dial-up. Last time I had looked (a 
 year ago probably) it was a LOT more.

 Your post encourages me to move up to HD - so again - many, many Thanks,

 Marguerita


[videoblogging] Re: My Story

2010-06-10 Thread Marguerita
Hi Dave,

I just don't have the words to thank you enough for this post!

I am just starting out (well, 18 months into using video) and still desperately 
trying to figure things out and learn.

Your details and timeline are great!  I am just now thinking about a better 
camera and better sound and your progression is a wonderful guideline - I'd 
have paid money for it - THANK YOU!

In my niche, story is everything, starting with why and then how.  
There's a great TED talk about it by Simon Sinek.

I am keeping this digest and referring to it again and again.  Good for you 
with your BoingBoing shout-out and YT partnering and your progression - I aim 
to follow your footsteps and enjoy learning from you.

On thing that has held me back a bit has been my fear of losing my dial-up 
viewers, esp. if I make HD vids, but I just checked my analytics and see that 
only 4% of my viewers come at my blog on dial-up.  Last time I had looked (a 
year ago probably) it was a LOT more.

Your post encourages me to move up to HD - so again - many, many Thanks,

Marguerita


--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, David Jones david.jo...@... wrote:

 Ok, I'll lead by example as I normally do, here is my video blogging story:
 
 Hi, I'm Dave Jones from Sydney Australia. I started a niche
 electronics engineering video blog in April 2009.
 http://www.eevblog.com
 and
 http://www.youtube.com/user/EEVblog