Updated: 11/27/09; 8:19:46 AM.
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"THE FOCUS OF DIGITAL MEDIA" - Gary Santoro and Mediaburn.net


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Wednesday, March 23, 2005

expressionist/fab/culture and other links on the web
Concept Albums and Blogs.

At the risk of going off-topic, I'm currently deeply into IMHO the best album I've heard in years - Green Day's American Idiot. It's a concept album and I often wonder how such a thing could be done in blogging. It's common wisdom that a focused blog is the best way to gain a following in the 'sphere. But I reckon bloggers could complement their chosen topic by producing concept-driven 'blog albums' from time to time. I wrote about this a year and a half ago, in a post comparing blogs to albums. While my position has changed on a couple of points in that Sept 2003 post, this extract illustrates what I mean:

"...in the tech blogging world, Don Park has recently written an album full of posts about Wikis, Dave Winer is in the midst of recording his thoughts on political blogs, Jon Udell has written a variety of classics on topics such as Universal Canvas. There are even the blogging equivalent of Unplugged albums - check out Mark Pilgrim's These Days."

While I encourage ambitious bloggers to be topic-focused, variety is the spice of life. An excellent way to keep things interesting is to explore a different concept every week or month (or whatever time period suits you). I have to keep reminding myself of this too. As I said in the Sept 03 post:

"Perhaps I'll start writing weblog "albums" - there'll be about 10 posts per album and each album will have a different unifying theme."

Hmmm. I have some ideas about how to do this in my Web 2.0-focused blog. Stay tuned ;-)

bonus link: Wikipedia list of concept albums. Includes this description of the Green Day album: "A Bay Area suburbanite named Jesus of Suburbia flees his broken home to experience city life, transforming into the rebellious St. Jimmy. Notable as a punk rock opera." More here (I heart Wikipedia).

[Read/Write Web]
8:24:46 AM    

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Stranded
Today is Photo-Day. [14]. Stranded at a deserted railway station in the middle of nowhere. Plus a bottle of Vodka.

Stranded.
[The Cartoonist]
7:34:39 AM    

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HDRFX1
Buy Sony HD camera from Amazon, support Cinema Minima too. Sony HDRFX1 HDVPresenting the world's first consumer 1080i high-definition camcorder: the Sony Handycam HDR-FX1. A revolution in form and function, the HDR-FX1 allows you to play and record interlaced high-definition video at resolutions up to 1440[lozenge]1080 for professional-quality video with vivid colors and striking detail. It even offers the ability to switch to standard DV recording and playback as the situation warrants. The HDR-FX1 features the Real-Time HD Codec Engine, which offers professional-level MPEG-2 video compression, and a 14-bit HD DXP (digital extended processor) for increased processing speed. Images are captured on a three-chip advanced HAD CCD system that provides increased detail and improved video performance without the color bleeding found in other systems. Optical capabilities include a Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* lens with 12[lozenge] optical zoom and Super SteadyShot image stabilization. Features:
  • Play and record interlaced high-definition video at resolutions up to 1440[lozenge]1080 for professional-quality video.
  • Three 1/3-inch wide-aspect-ratio advanced HAD CCD imagers for enhanced color quality.
  • Professional-level MPEG2 video compression with the real-time HD Codec Engine.
  • Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* lens with 12[lozenge] optical zoom.
  • Record at either 30 frames per second or, for a film-like feel, at 24 frames per second.
BUY Sony HDRFX1 HDV High Definition Camcorder at Amazon.com; it you want in-store pickup today at a local US retail store; and much less if you order online for delivery from Amazon. Your purchase through this link supports Cinema Minima.

How the Sony HDV cameras fake 24, 25, and 30 frames-per-second (FPS). The Cineframe shooting modes in the Sony HDV HDR-FX1 let you simulate the look-and-feel of progressive-scanned images, but the camera section itself is still running at its normal, interlaced field rate.

Read David Pogue's review of the Sony HDRFX1 in the New York Times: “All right, go ahead, ask it: In whose twisted opinion does a US$3,300 price tag make this a consumer camcorder? Let's put it this way: the next-least-expensive three-chip, high-definition camcorder costs about US$40,000. The significance of the FX1 is that it blows open the world of high-quality, professional-looking wide-screen video to anyone with talent and a valid credit card. For independent moviemakers, wedding videographers, corporate filmmakers and video freaks of any ilk, this is a big, big deal.

BUY Sony HDRFX1 HDV High Definition Camcorder at Amazon.com. Your purchase through this link supports Cinema Minima.
[Cinema Minima]
7:29:41 AM    

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© Copyright 2009 Gary Santoro.
 

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