A 225 degree shutter angle at 30 FPS would keep the length of time the sensor was exposed the same as it would be at 24 FPS and a 180 degree shutter angle (though often it is set to 1/50th rather than 1/48th of a second so the equivalent would be a 216 degree angle). You still have more frames but the motion blur and light will be closer to a cinematic feel.
By studying samples analyzed by the Curiosity rover, scientists have taken another step toward understanding whether life could have ever existed on Mars.
A new study suggests that non-biological sources cannot fully account for the abundance of organic compounds found in a sample collected by the rover.
Dig into the details: https://t.co/zZKCgKEROr
ViewScreen Scout (Beta) launches today 🚀
From your iPhone, in real time 🎬📱
visualize scenes, animate characters, block movement, adjust lighting …
See your creative vision boldly go where no one has gone before 🖖
Get it now here: https://t.co/in6vXDGxdB
🎬 Lights, Camera, Action 🌟
Center stage at the The American Society of Cinematographers legendary clubhouse
Surrounded by such rich history and incredible talent – an absolute honor 🎥
Set to revolutionize the movie-making journey
📸 Danyael M. Alcaraz
#theasc#viewscreen
That’s a wrap on “Ted”! Thanks to our brilliant cast and stellar crew! A truly exceptional group of people. Get ready world, the bear is back. @peacock
A couple of years after I'd moved to Atlanta on $24,000/yr, as the first employee of what was then called the Singularity Institute, the primary funder suddenly lost all their money. Not criminal, but a bad bet with too much exposure. I never learned the details.
In one portion of the article @SethMacFarlane discusses Viewscreen, a bleeding edge technology that we developed for On Set Visualization and Camera work. Seth’s support helped Gene Reddick and I make it a reality and we are going to be putting it into work on future projects!
If you’re paying attention you can spot the remains of old rail bridges everywhere, flanking roads like the ruins of some ancient Cyclopean city gate. They stick out like a sore thumb even when they’re put to other uses.