» mirror neurons Performance and Embodied Research Colloquium. Het Utrechts Archief. GET YOURSELF IN GEAR. How to rip clips for fan vidding, from your DVD. MPEG Streamclip—fan video tutorial, iMovie, VideoStudio. Codecs for fan videos—DV AVI, DV MOV, DivX, XviD, Lagarith, Huffyuv, etc. What's good, what's not. Help with VOB files? Editing DVD Material in an Avid « Splice Now. I recently had to re-edit some source material that lived only on a DVD. And I had to do it at home on a software-only Media Composer system. Many friends told me not to attempt this–too many settings, too many ways to screw yourself up. Better to use a good DVD player, using component or SDI outputs, and digitize via hardware: Adrenaline, Mojo or Nitris. But I didn’t have the hardware, so I persisted. There are indeed, many, many ways to convert DVD material to Avid media, and by now, it seems like I’ve tried them all.
I’ll describe the workflow I came up with below. It seems to work well and once you figure it out, it’s not all that hard to do. The process begins with software to get the video off the DVD. Settings are critical. Insert your DVD and open MPEG Streamclip. Choose the audio track you want. I set the basic import options as follows (if you have trouble seeing the screenshots, click them and they’ll enlarge in a new window). Then click Make Movie to begin digitizing. E-Pulse Festival.
Printing Services. I'm a Star. The Daily Scan. Photobooth Locations. In their heyday, photobooths dotted the landscape in five and dime stores, bus stations, and amusement parks from coast to coast. These days, as big box stores take over from Woolworth's, and digital technology touches every aspect of daily life, old-style photographic process photobooths have been relegated to scrap heaps. At the same time, their antique status and nostalgic appeal have made them attractive to people with a sense of history and an attachment to the fleeting, unique nature of the non-digital process. In the last ten years, photobooths have made a modest comeback, finding safe haven in bars, restaurants, art galleries, and out-of-the-way amusement parks that haven't yet felt the digital pull. As the digital revolution churns on and it becomes more difficult to maintain photochemical photobooths, the Photobooth Directory will catalog the appearance and disappearance of booths around the world.
Memory Game commercial - 1990. Giulio Camillo. Giulio Camillo Delmino was one of the most famous thinker in the sixteenth century, however he had been completely forgotten by the eighteenth. His claim to such a transitory fame lies in his construction of a Memory Theater, of which only a short, eighty-seven page book, L'idea del Theatro (1550), explaining its construction and function remains. This theatre was a wooden structure which was first presented in Venice and then in Paris, and was the talk of Europe at the time. Various accounts describe the structure as a building which would allow one or two individuals at a time within its interior. The insides were inscribed with a variety of images, figures, and ornaments. It was full of little boxes arranged in various orders and grades. Camillo had transformed the Art of Memory into a practical means for construction. Camillo never finish his Memory Theatre, nor did any of his constructions survive to the seventeenth century.
References: 1. 2. ibid, p. 157. 3. 4. The Renaissance of the Theater of Memory. Giulio Camillo (1480 - 1544) was as well-known in his era as Bill Gates is now. Just like Gates he cherished a vision of a universal Storage and Retrieval System, and just like Microsoft Windows, his ‘Theatre of the Memory’ was, despite constant revision, never completed. Camillo’s legendary Theatre of Memory remained only a fragment, its benefits only an option for the future. When it was finished, the user - so he predicted - would have access to the knowledge of the whole universe. On account of his promising invention, Camillo’s contemporaries called him ‘the divine’. It was only in the computer age that Camillo’s name reappeared out of oblivion - at first sporadically in a few specialised articles in the fifties, then with increasing intensity and enthusiasm, until Camillo became a real hero of books and congresses, and even of television programmesand Internet appearances. The objective knowledge we do have can be summarised very briefly.
Dream Anatomy: Gallery: Wilhelm Braune and C. Schmiedel: Topographisch-anatomischer atlas. Click on the artwork above for a higher resolution images. (loading time is long for slow connections) Topographisch-anatomischer atlas nach durchschnitten an gefrorenen cadavern... Leipzig, 1872. Chromolithograph. National Library of Medicine. Wilhelm Braune(1831-1892)[anatomist] C. Braune’s atlas is notable for its beautiful color, harmonious composition, and extensive use of frozen cross-sections. < Previous Image | Next Image >Complete Gallery of Images To see more images from this book, visit Historical Anatomies on the Web.
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