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iPhone 4 video embodies new-tech aesthetic
CNet News ^ | June 30, 2010 | by Stephen Shankland

Posted on 06/30/2010 9:28:39 PM PDT by Swordmaker

It's easy to see how the iPhone 4's high-definition 1280x720 video would be a handy feature. It's an entirely different thing to see just how impressive it can be in the right hands.

Watch the Video Production here on Vimeo

In this case, those hands belong chiefly to Michael Koerbel and Anna Elizabeth James, students at the University of Southern California's School of Cinematic Arts, who wrote a short video called "Apple of My Eye." Koerbel recorded it with an iPhone 4, and James edited it on the same hardware with Apple's new iMovie app--all in less than 48 hours.

As with Vincent Laforet's "Reverie," shot with Canon's first video-capable SLR, the EOS 5D Mark II, the appeal of "Apple of My Eye" isn't the acting or plot. Instead, it's the demonstration that a new generation of relatively mainstream equipment can achieve what only professional gear could earlier.

And as marketing executives know, such works also are a potentially powerful draw for all those budding artists who aspire to produce something beyond snapshots of the family. Many never will, of course, but that won't stop them from buying premium products.

Don't expect most iPhone 4 owners to craft comparably high-quality video vignettes. "Apple of My Eye" is pleasant to watch in part because its relatively professional production values--carefully arranged camera perspective, suitable lighting, a sweeping musical score--just aren't going to make it to most amateur video. There was more gear involved than just an iPhone, too--a tripod for still shots and a camera dolly for moving shots, for example. And James said it took 14 hours to edit.

Do expect cinema to be changed, though, as Moore's Law collides with Hollywood. The Red cameras at the high end, Canon's 5D Mark II, 7D, and Rebel T2i in the middle, and the iPhone 4 at the low end--these sorts of digital tools will fuel innovation among the experimental crowd and likely draw fresh talent to the industry.

The spread of high-end technology to the mainstream is a broader trend than with just video. The high-quality photos a person can produce with a digital SLR and Photoshop opened the doors for the microstock photography business, letting part-time amateurs elbow in on professionals' turf. Junior-high-school rock bands can mix and dub music with tools better than professional studios had a generation earlier. And the Brushes app can turn an iPad into an artist's sketch tablet in a way a $2,000 Wacom Cintiq tethered to a computer never could.

Again, such tools are most impressive in the skilled, capable hands that most of us lack. But the spread of technology means more people will be able to learn, and the Internet means there's a place for the rest of us to find what they've done.

So, while you shouldn't hold out Oscar hopes for that video of your child blowing out the birthday candles, you should expect for some engaging new art.

This still from 'Apple of My Eye' shows a little bit of what it takes to record a higher-end video with an iPhone 4.


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Business/Economy; Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: ilovebillgates; iwanthim; iwanthimbad; microsoftfanboys
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To: PugetSoundSoldier
I know you're pushing iMovie

The ARTICLE is about iMovie, which apparently works well enough to someone to make a movie with it. Bit of sour grapes there, since your Google searches for movie editing programs for Android turned up short?

You are actually trolling the Apple support forums to dig up dirt on Apple products to post here. How pathetic is that?

61 posted on 07/02/2010 5:55:10 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat

Hey, at least Qik lets you save the file... Apparently iMovie doesn’t even do that! ;)


62 posted on 07/02/2010 10:27:02 AM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier (Indignation over the Sting of Truth is the defense of the indefensible)
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To: PugetSoundSoldier
Hey, at least Qik lets you save the file... Apparently iMovie doesn’t even do that! ;)

Turns out there's an issue where having too many large still images in your video can cause problems on export. Given that Qik doesn't do still images in video, and simply cropping a video in iMovie wouldn't produce the problem, there's no comparison. I'd expect a software update. Version 1.0 of any software usually has some issues.

63 posted on 07/02/2010 11:08:26 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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