New Technology and Innovation

Technology and Innovation



Building the Database with CatDV Pro 0

Posted on March 08, 2009 by admin

We also tested Live Capture Plus, Square Box System’s stand alone capture software. When I want to really test a capture utility, I reach out under my desk and bring out “Old Scratchy,” a Mini DV tape full of dropouts, timecode breaks, and even PAL an NTSC footage. I was impressed by Live Capture Plus’s ability to wade through the mess, and not simply give up with error message. It managed to capture e erything. problems and all, breaking th tape into sub-reels when necessary. Liv Capture Plus is for Mac OS X only, and currently works only with DV tapes.

Building the Database
Once the clip is captured and analyzed into individual clips, CatDV Pro then d some heavy crunching, creating both thumbnail images and small preview quality movies for each. These preview movies are small enough to remain on your hard drive for archiving purposes, and stay there once you finish a project and delete your original movie files. An QuickTime codec can be specified for the preview movies, including Offline and iPod video. You then present thes clips together in a catalog, which is comprised of many clips, each havind its own customizable metadata. Most of the data entry is done in this Clip Details window. Aside from the basic clip name, tape, and notes fields, the are six user definable fields.

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Square Box Systems and her CatDV Pro 0

Posted on March 07, 2009 by admin

There is a school of video asset organization that is comprised of a series of shoeboxes in the closet filled with random tapes. Hopefully, each tape has a label, probably hastily scribbled upon in the field. It doesn’t take long before such a system becomes unwieldy, reaching the point where locating clips takes up more time than editing.
Square Box Systems has come to the rescue with CatDV Pro. CatDV Pro creates and manages a searchable database of every clip that’s ever been digitized into your system. It can capture the clip’s metadata and thumbnail images, as well as a highly compressed preview movie. This allows you to view and store your assets, once your original footage has been taken offline.  The first step in organizing your footage is digitizing it into your computer. There are two ways of doing this with CatDV Pro. The first and most intuitive is to capture the entire tape in your editing software, then import that file into CatDV Pro. The second is to capture from within CatDV Pro itself. (This will require a third party VDIG driver if you’re on a PC, or the optional Live Capture Plus if you’re on a Mac.)
Bringing in a full length clip from Final Cut Pro was a snap, and the file imported easily into CatDV. The clips automatically separate into scenes using DV time stamp detection, or using CatDV’s own visual frame referencing algorithms. The DV detection was spot on, and the visual detection was remarkably close, requiring a tweaking of a few frames to get just right. However, it’s a huge help if you’re cataloging footage from analog sources. CatDV Pro can import and manipulate any QuickTime media codec, including QuickTime flavors of HDV and DVCPRO HD.

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