![]() 03/05/2015 at 11:45 • Filed to: numbers, Still tired | ![]() | ![]() |
Data heavy that is.
I was just doing the math on what it would take to go from a compressed 1080p workflow to a 4K RAW workflow. Most consumer cameras run a datarate of 12-25 Mbps (small b) so between 1.5-3 MBps, or what you can get with a great internet provider these days. Stepping up to mid-level puts you in the 50-200 Mbps range (6.25-25 MBps) or about 1.5 GB per minute, which is a lot. Then there is Cine 4K range. 125-165 MBps (Big B). That's 10 GB a minute. 10! That is, if you want it compressed.
If I wanted true raw it would be 389 MBps, or 23 GB a minute. Also, did I mention that the current price of cards fast enough to record that are ~$6 a GB. That means in data alone its ~$135 a minute* to film at full strength. GREAT SCOTT!
*obviously you reuse the cards. But 2x 64 GB cars only gets you 5 and a half minutes so you will be buying lots of cards.
![]() 03/05/2015 at 11:51 |
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This of course highlights what total horror HD streaming can be on distribution networks. It's the IBM/Microsoft debacle all over again - "No matter how fast we build it, MS will find a way to make it run slow!" etc.
![]() 03/05/2015 at 11:55 |
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The camera I may or may not be aquiring was bought for telemedicine purposes and the idea was to be able to stream over a fat dedicated pipe up to 50 MBps for maximum signal fidelity. Color and resolution, I guess, matters in laproscopic surgery across the country.
![]() 03/05/2015 at 12:00 |
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And that would be a field in which compression artifacts could literally kill.
![]() 03/05/2015 at 12:00 |
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Or the Internet:
1995: Slow dial up, basic pages with few ads
1997: Faster dial up, mostly basic pages with few ads
2001: DSL/Cable, dynamic pages with ads and pop-ups
2006: Cable popular, video streaming starting up
2008: Hey, a lot of people have broadband/fiber? CROSS-SERVER ALL THE PAGES!
![]() 03/05/2015 at 12:02 |
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exactly.
![]() 03/05/2015 at 12:05 |
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That's a lot of jigabatts.
![]() 03/05/2015 at 12:13 |
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Jiga is actually a correct way to pronounce Giga; True story
![]() 03/05/2015 at 12:23 |
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Did not know that. Now I imagine people getting into arguments like the internet does about the correct pronunciation of gif.
![]() 03/05/2015 at 12:25 |
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HE SHOT FIRST! i mean, wha...what were we talking about?