El ‘e-lancer’, trabajador independiente muy cualificado, modelo para próximas décadas (vía Prepárese: en el futuro, todos autónomos | Sociedad |...
See on Scoop.it - iDocs Collection
A documentary film by Pepita Ferrari about making documentaries…
Glidecam Tutorial by Cristina Valdivieso + Jon Connor
If you’re serious about capturing smooth moving-camera shots, you might have considered...
Que buenos recuerdos de esta tremenda tradición catalana
Casteller (por Mike Randolph)
hermoso!
Un resumen infográfico de Las 10 estrategias de manipulación mediática de Noam Chomsky. Vía Revista Apolorama.
Interesting post by Sandra Gaudenzi and Arnau Gifreu about the webdocs or i-docs trends that are emerging nowadays.
“For the foreseeable future, we’ll watch our mobile video the Apple way: HTML5 embedded, H.264 encoded and HLS streamed. Any platform seeking broad support for quality video (Windows Phone?) must implement HLS. And any publisher seeking mobile viewers must encode in H.264, embed using HTML5 and stream using HLS.
Is this a bad thing? Quite the contrary. The alternative is fragmentation: multiple plugins, multiple codecs and multiple protocols. This is an annoyance for large media corporations; it increases their development and delivery costs. However, it’s disastrous for smaller video publishers, since the companies lack the resources to build and support multi-platform video delivery. Ultimately, that is a detriment to mobile video. Like the web in general, mobile video thrives on broad availability of a wide variety of content.
A more open set of standards (WebM and DASH) should come in time. For now though, Apple is the standard.”
via Mashable
Un nou experiment que ens mostra les espectaculars possibilitats que s’obren en el camp del video online explotant el llenguatge HTML5:
“Chris Milk, the director of last year’s amazing HTML5 video for Arcade Fire is once again collaborating with Google, this time for the new Danger Mouse album, ROME.
The experiment went live earlier this month, and it’s yet another example of what is possible for video and HTML5. Most of the effects and features in the “3 Dreams of Black” video are powered by WebGL and JavaScript — not strictly using the HTML5 video tag. Still, it’s important to consider that HTML5 video isn’t just about the player; it can be about a bigger, better experience.”
via @mashable “How HTML5 Will Transform the Online Video Landscape”