Hola amigos, February is upon us, and so is another news update for the Apertus Project.
Introducing ApertusOur new Project Leader,
Sebastian Pichelhofer, has created a video introducing the Apertus
Project and explaining our intentions. The video has subtitles in
English, Spanish, Portuguese, French and Catalan (just press the "CC"
button on YouTube's player to choose the one you prefer)
The video's URL is:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvI7rJ_AZys
As an Apertus Community member, consider it your duty to share this
with contacts, friends and professionals whom you think might find this
to be of interest.
Apertus Stereo RigCommunity members Nathan Clark
and Winne Yang have developed a new Apertus rig for stereo 3D
cinematography. Needless to say, we've all been blown away by their
ingenuity. Congratulations goes out to them and their stunning
machinists!!
New Dictator Concept (Dictator II)Sebastian
has started working on a new concept for the Dictator hardware
interface. He is currently applying for art sponsorship/state funding
(based in Vienna, Austria) to develop a prototype unit.
The
new design came about when he started to create a 3D model of his
previous Dictator concept. As pointed out by Sebastian, there were
several design flaws with the prior design:
- The wheels would always be getting in your way when the operator tries to reach for the buttons next to the LCD
-
Having buttons left/right of LCD requires the text on the LCD (showing
each button's function) to take up pretty much the entire display.
In
the new design, the buttons are located above/below the LCD (in a
similar manner to the Arri Alexa layout), which solves the problem of
wasting the limited space available on such a small screen.
Sebastian's new design concept is focused on allowing a DOP to also
operate the DICTATOR with only one hand when shooting with a shoulder
rig.
New Website (launching soon) Work is continuing round the clock on our revamped website
http://dev.apertus.org/Public
access is currently denied whilst the new site is a work-in-progress.
Data from the current site has been edited, reviewed and transferred
into a layout that is professional, sleek and easier for new community
members (and non open-source users) to understand. No release date has
been set as of yet, but take our word for it that things are going to be
DAMN cool when the new site launches (hopefully soon...)!
Community Map (on new Apertus website)Apertus
is an International Project, and it is simply remarkable to realise
just how far our community of engineers, developers, artists and
followers extends across the planet. Here is a snapshot indicating where
some of the Apertus Team members are situated:
Preparing Apertus for the Libre Software MeetingThe
Libre Software meeting is not until July, but plans are in the works
for how to best grow our community and spread awareness of the Apertus
project at this international summit.
Sebastian has suggested
that we make an Apertus film about the event, with the possibility of
streaming talks and presentations live to the web with Elphel cameras.
Nathan is also interested in having a real-time stereoscopic Apertus
rig, setup and functioning in our booth. The awesomeness of all this is
still sinking in!
Michael Green has offered to run a workshop
on the future of cinema and where our project fits in. This will also
give us the opportunity to discuss a wide range of digital cinema
topics.
Sasha is then planning on delivering a 10-20 minute
presentation examining how we've fostered an international community of
engineers, developers, artists and followers through our project
website and online forum. The intention is to follow this up with a
discussion analysing the success/disadvantages of our forum and whether
its implementation is a viable strategy that other open source projects
might benefit from.
Following up on the VLC issue from January's newsletterIn
last month's newsletter, we mentioned that newer VLC versions were not
displaying the data stream generated by the Elphel camera correctly.
Following up on this issue, we can now say that the problem has been
alleviated. To correctly display a live-stream through VLC (Version
1.1.11 and later), either flash your Elphel camera to an image compiled
from the latest source code or manually install the fixed streamer as
described here:
http://apertus.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=2190
As a quick fix -if you don't want to rebuild an entire Elphel camera
flash image from source- you can replace the camera internal
/usr/local/bin/str binary with this one:
http://apertus.org/forums/download/file.php?id=285
Run "sync" on a camera terminal afterwards to clean crc checks with the
changed file. If you have any questions or feedback, reply on our
forums in the following thread:
http://apertus.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=5&start=30
2012: The Year of ApertusAs the next key stage of
development approaches, we'd like to thank everyone for providing so
much critical support and feedback. Members from Telenoika: AudioVisual
Open Creative Community (Barcelona, Spain) have contacted us to
express their interest in developing software tools and/or plugins for
working with Apertus camera footage in Blender (
http://www.blender.org/). All progress here will be reported in the following months.
2012
is already shaping out to be a spectacular year for Apertus. However,
we can also foresee that greater contributions will be necessary before
we're in a position to release our powerful new prototype. At present,
there are but one or two bottlenecks stopping our design from meeting
the desires and requirements of industry professionals. To combat this,
we're gearing up for a flight that will make Apertus surge on the
radar.
Unfortunately, our projected flight-path is also going
to take us right through the storm clouds. As this month's newsletter
draws to a close, we extend a special invitation. Dear friends,
collaborators, radicals and colleagues, help spread the word of our
project and join us as we prepare to break through the very roof of the
stratosphere. Stay tuned to our forums and website as more information
regarding new developments will follow shortly.
Discuss this newsletter issue here:
http://apertus.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=350
Best wishes to you all,
Sasha