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Everything posted by Andrew - EOSHD
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Which Compact Flash card for 5D Mark III raw video?
Andrew - EOSHD replied to Andrew - EOSHD's topic in Cameras
HDMI is difficult at the moment. 1) They have not full reverse engineered the HDMI chipset. 2) The camera processes the HDMI signal so cannot output clean raw data. 3) You'd need a bespoke recorder that was able to take the raw data over HDMI, it isn't the same as a video signal. -
Genesis by James Miller Shooting spectacular raw video on the 5D Mark III requires UDMA 7 compact flash cards. Ideally you need a 1000x 64GB or 128GB card and certainly more than one for anything but very short shoots. Here's my guide to which ones to go for. Read the full article here
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Not denying any of that pee. Also I am not criticising Laforet in the way you're insinuating. I suggest you re-read the blog post! You clearly haven't seen the DNG files if you're not sure it provides more resolution or dynamic range than the HDMI out with log gamma!!! You don't need a chart test just use your bloody eyes mate!
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Yep does seem to be a bug. I am running Windows under VMWare for when I need it.
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Great test Neumann, any Vimeo version of this with downloadable file? YouTube compression muddies the water a bit. To me the 5D Mark III looks much better than the GH2 even on YouTube.
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Yes, the SD is definitely capable of faster write speeds than 22MB/s. Not a card bottle neck, looks like controller one.
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Sure it is not the space in path to file that is causing the problem not the 2GB file size?
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6D is reaching 40MB/s. Double 600D, but still half of what common 1000x CF cards achieve on the 5D Mark III (80MB/s+) so not good enough for 1080p raw. Alex thinks it is card controller limit not card on 600D. So it may be stuck at the lower resolutions. Let's wait and see.
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That's not what I am saying at all HurtinMinorKey. Art and commerce are not separate endeavours. I am an independent professional with my own projects. It isn't abject nonsense it is a statement of fact. I decided not to enter the established commercial filmmaking world and to concentrate on my OWN projects and making money that way instead like an entrepreneurial filmmaker. Tom Lowe is another one. Seems you don't understand oh dear.
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Hang on. Why are you taking early pre-alpha dev code like it is a final conclusion? A bit early to judge no?
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Canon won't sue their own customers. They will just refuse any liability for Magic Lantern cameras and probably won't honour warranties. In my view the hardware isn't stressed, isn't overheating, batteries won't burnt into flames. Canon should know this - their engineers will - although maybe some of the advisors and reps will think otherwise. Software directly blow up silicon. Heat does that. Heat is a by product of software that stresses the hardware. Raw is not processor intensive. Compression is! Why do you think Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera can do raw with no fan in a tiny case for $999 and the Epic with compressed Red Code raw has to have a very powerful ASIC, big fans and massive heat sink? The weight of public opinion will be heavily against Canon on PR if they do try to shut the hack down, but really the best they can do towards that end is to scare the devs with legal talk or encrypt the firmware on future DSLRs. There's a precedence here. When Canon tried to shut down Canon Rumors over legalities (trademark), public opinion was against it and they backtracked, quite wisely. Canon should understand Magic Lantern before making a decision and make the decision for the good of their customers not for political reasons. It makes perfect business sense to support the excellent third party software running on their cameras. Where would a Mac be without Adobe software? Should Apple try to sue Adobe because they don't want Premiere running on a Mac? No. Crazy. So why should Canon consider doing so with Magic Lantern. It isn't a liability, it's an asset!! A potentially huge money spinning one at that.
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Same experience conversing with Phil myself. A lot of nasty tantrums over email and threatening behaviour. He needs to handle criticism far better than he is doing. Really the issue is not that he doesn't need raw, or finds it impractical, or wants to constantly point that out. The issue is that he is in a position to help us and help Magic Lantern, and all he can do is moan and post pictures of himself.
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Yes but I am in privileged position of being able to fund my own projects and I DP essentially for myself and my own art, not on a spec shoot for someone else. This was a conscious decision I made about 3 years ago to go down the route of an artist rather than a commercial shooter. Hence the term indie filmmaker. If it was not for my anamorphic guide and GH2 guide I wouldn't have been able to fund my filmmaking. So very thankful to all who follow EOSHD. I understand the needs of fellow commercial filmmakers a lot of my fiends in Berlin and London, and in the US are working in the industry. I am more an industry outsider in the way I work. If you have a problem with that I suggest you go and follow a different filmmaker. I'm not the only one to be offended by Philip's attitude. Luke who is close to Magic Lantern devs is and I think the whole team expected more enthusiasm from 'the guru' https://www.facebook.com/NeumannFilms/posts/476670929070347
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Download the sample DNG frames from continuous raw video on the 600D Though most of the development at Magic Lantern has been focussed on the powerful 5D Mark III, the latest firmware builds have also been ported to the 600D. How does it perform for raw video? [url=http://www.eoshd.com/content/10421/a-look-at-raw-video-on-the-canon-600d]Read the full article here[/url]
