Sunday, April 13, 2014

NAB Show 2014

This year was my second trip to the National Association of Broadcasters exhibition (NAB Show) in Vegas as part of the Freefly Systems setup and pit crew. NAB is a huge (~93,000 attendees) expo for media technology, kind of like CES but for the Producers rather than the Consumers. In fact it's in the same venue as CES, the Las Vegas Convention Center.


Last year, the MōVI gimbal debuted and I think I explained the concept of active stabilization (one I can't seem to escape no matter where I end up) to a thousand different people in four days. This year, I didn't even have time to count the number of other handheld active stabilizers there were at the show. Certainly the gimbal trend has taken hold and there is no going back now.

The Birdy Cam!
I think the MōVI brand still holds the top end of the active stabilizer market (highest performance and, yes, highest price). I haven't used and won't ever use this blog for advertising - I'm not good at it anyway - but one big advantage Freefly had was a one-year head start during which some really spectacular footage was created by ever-more-skillful operators, and it's fun to see the results.

One of the event highlights was this interview with Tabb (Freefly president) and Garret Brown, inventor of the Steadicam. I felt like there should be some lighting bolts for dramatic effect given the "Steadicam-killer" hype surrounding handheld gimbals. But in actuality, the point made is an important technical one: active stabilizers control {pitch, roll, yaw}. There are still three degrees of freedom {x, y, z} that are at the mercy of the operator's movement, and Steadicam and its operators have perfected the smoothing of translation over the last 40 years.

Part of the fun of NAB is that I finally get to show off what I've been working on. My big project for this NAB was the EE/software for the new MōVI Controller, possibly the most hardcore-looking RC transmitter in existence:

My pet project, the blue OLED display. (The one on the unit itself, not the SmallHD monitor...) Anti-aliased font support, bitmaps, bar graphs, scrolling, string and numeric formatting, etc., all in a lightweight display driver written from scratch.
The station I somehow ended up manning at NAB: the new controller paired with the largest MōVI, the M15, and the Sony F55, rigged with wireless video and remote focus.
People trying out the new controller. Controlling framing and focus at the same time would take some practice, I think, and there is still the option of having a third operator control focus.
This was a hands-on demo; anyone could walk up and try it out. On one hand this was great, because it means I don't have to hold it the entire time (it was about 18-19lbs, total). But on the other hand, as my Maker Faire experience has informed me, it also means constantly watching the equipment, making sure it stays operational, changing batteries, and reminding people to share...all while trying to answer questions. And of course while most people are very respectful of the hardware, there are the expo trolls who go from booth to booth trying to break things.

In general, booth ops went much more smoothly this year, I think, due to a combination of better preparation and more manpower. There were a few other new toys to keep people engaged as well:

A Zero FX electric motorcycle with a Steadicam arm and M15 gimbal attached to the back. It seems I can't escape electric motorcycles no matter where I end up, either.
The Tero, a 1/5th-scale camera car, made a return as well. It's carrying an inverted M10 gimbal and Blackmagic 4K Production Camera.
Because our hardware was working well, and because we had enough people in the pits to handle the traffic, I actually got to wander around the show floor this year. There was a lot of camera porn, for sure. The Sony a7S was one of the big announcements, a small camera with supposedly epic low-light performance thanks to a full-frame 35mm sensor with just enough huge, gapless pixels for 4K video. On the other end of the size spektrum, AJA and Blackmagic also announced new, relatively inexpensive, 4K professional cameras.

The Blackmagic URSA. I can't get over how nice the machining is. On the other side is a 10" 1080p monitor.
I also went in search of the large active stabilizers - the ones that are mounted to full-size helicopters and camera cars for just about every aerial or car chase scene in a movie ever. There were three that I found at the show this year:

Filmotechnic, camera car specialists, with the Russian Arm and Flight Head active stabilizer (not sure exactly which one).
Shotover K1 full-size helicopter gimbal. This was about twice as large as I thought it was.
Cineflex, about the size I thought it was, but attached to a 27'-wingspan RC plane! Ryan Archer gogogogogo.
Cineflex ATV with one mounted in front and another in back.
A few other random sights of the show:

Crab drive (Or is it Swerve Drive? I can never remember the distinction.) FIRST robot camera dolly.
The circular equivalent of energy chain.
EditShare Lightworks, a powerful and relatively inexpensive video editing tool that I discovered at last year's NAB and have been using since.
Cutaway of a Canon lens...not sure how this even exists.
So yeah, these were just some of the things I saw at the show this year. It's definitely a bit of a circus, with a lot of money spent on impressive booths (and yes, sadly, in this day and age, booth babes are still a thing).

Booth cars I can understand.
Ignoring the flashy bullshit is hard, but underneath there is some cool tech on display and that's mostly what I like to see. Active stabilizers, wireless HD video, less and less expensive high-quality video cameras, more accessible software, etc., all make for an exciting media era - one for which I will happily hide on the engineering side.

4 comments:

  1. I don't mind advertising if you focus on the awesome engineering of it all... do you have any cool videos of it?

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    1. There are a few links in the post to some video taken from it. But here's a few cool ones showing how it's used, both handheld and on a multirotor:

      https://vimeo.com/88276974
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5TXKKosMmU

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  2. Hi Shane! What is size and resolution of OLED display in MOVI controller?

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    Replies
    1. The small display built into the controller is 2.8" diagonal, 256x64.

      If you're referring to the larger monitor, it varies - the most common size is probably 7-8" diagonal and 720p resolution like the SmallHD AC7 OLED version.

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