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Linux Media Arts Advances Video in Linux 103

GigsVT writes "Linux Media Arts has introduced a line of video capture and hardware MPEG encoding cards with full Linux support. The sd601 is a full featured hardware video solution including hardware dissolve, key, wipe, and split screen. At pricetags around $3000 US, they aren't cheap, but this could break Linux into the video editing market. This isn't vaporware, they are selling these right now."
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Linux Media Arts Advances Video in Linux

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  • What the hell is a starwipe?

    • What the hell is a starwipe?

      You obviously never watched a lot of old Abba videos...
    • Re:starwipes (Score:3, Informative)

      by skribe ( 26534 )
      A wipe is a way of 'cutting' between two shots. The existing shot is wiped away and replaced by the new shot. It's used a lot in Star Wars. A star wipe is a wipe in a star shape. Usually starting in the middle of the existing shot. Inside the star is the new shot. The star expands outwards until the new shot replaces the existing shot. Quite common in late 70's-early 80's music videos.
    • find the episode of the simpsons where homer makes a dating service tape for ned flanders.

      homer makes great use of the star wipe.
  • What is "Standard Definition" video? I can record video from my firewire camcorder and edit it with a number of programs. Video card ~ $200 and software $100-$300. This is on Windows of course. Apart from running on Linux, how is this $3000 solution better?
    • by decefett ( 127257 ) <(moc.ellevaf) (ta) (ttocs)> on Sunday March 31, 2002 @07:02AM (#3259539) Homepage
      Apart from running on Linux, how is this $3000 solution better?

      The card is a professional solution for the professional broadcast market, for what it does $3000 is actually pretty resonable.

      This product takes SDI (Serial Digial Interface) for video input which is the standard to broadcast video, it runs at 270Mbs and is not found on anything but professional (or at best "prosumer") gear.

      This is not the first pro card that does SDI under Linux either, IIRC Optibase have a Mediapump card that does SDI under *nix.
  • Video Toaster (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 31, 2002 @06:15AM (#3259399)
    The Video Toaster can do all these things, and the Amiga runs Linux like a champ. Thanks to the 68030 and higher's RSMUL and deep vectorized floating point (Intel and AMD are still catching up to the 68030's multimedia/vector instrcutions), despite the fact that it's not a performer in other areas, the 68030 still runs rings around the next choice for raw bus bandwidth.

    An Amiga with a Video Toaster 2.0 and a time base corrector can be had for around $1200, and with any of the seven mainstream Linux desktop video packages, it can be slaved as a second system, so you control it from a cheap, fast PC running Linux, with the Amiga doing the majority of the hard work.

    Video Toaster users are the few sane remaining Amiga fanatics. Most television shows and minor Hollywood production companies still use Video Toaster for the few things you still can't do in Adobe Premier and After Effects.

    • "are the few sane remaining Amiga fanatics" - well I happen to be one of the sane non-Video Toaster Amiga fanatics. As to using a PC (spit,spit) for some of the work - why not just upgrade to a 68040/68060 or PPC instead?
    • Most television shows and minor Hollywood production companies still use Video Toaster for the few things you still can't do in Adobe Premier and After Effects.

      Actually, most television shows (in my experience) are still cut in linear*. Those that are cut in nonlinear are done with Avids; the crappy stuff comes out of a Media Composer or a Symphony, while the relatively big-budget shows are sometimes cut on a DS. The really big-ticket shows are finished on a Smoke. Most of the HD stuff, to my knowledge, is done in Smoke.

      Video Toaster is just an also-ran.

      Right now, Final Cut Pro is also an also-ran, but lots of houses seem to be replacing Media Composers with FCP for off-lining.

      *Linear editing, in with video tape machines. Opposed to nonlinear editing, like with computers.
  • I already own video capture cards that run under Linux, but what about other imaging products? I was doing some work at a dental office the other day, and they were using specialized video capture equipment for their X-ray machines (running on Windows 98 PCs... blech!). Based on the Windows driver name (bt848.sys), I'm sure it uses a standard video capture chipset used in many TV tuner cards, but these cards *definitely* didn't have Linux drivers.
    • Bttv Driver (Score:2, Informative)

      by NetFusion ( 86828 )
      http://www.metzlerbros.org/bttv.html

      With the right insmod args you can get pretty much any bt8x8 based card working under linux.
  • Even cooler than that hardware: They're maintaining Broadcast 2000. [linuxmediaarts.com] Now somebody get me a microphone and a fire under my ass so's I can get busy recording some tunes...
  • "but this could break Linux into the video editing market"

    I thought they already did? Some Linux Journal article about Broadcast 2000 [linuxjournal.com] and aA list of supported video capture cards for Linux [metzlerbros.org]

    Sure the hardware isn't quite Linux supported yet, but at least there are some lower-end cards out there that are supported. So it looks like for the home user the hardware and software is somewhat there. And what about for high-end? Well supposedly Linux is already being used for editing movies [computer.org] (including LOTR). I'm not sure how they get their video onto the computers though, but there must be some way to do it I guess.

    So I guess this hardware is special because it is specifically targetted at Linux, but as far as breaking Linux into the video editing market...I think that already happened a little bit so far. And it's not going to get any better with a $3000 USD card.

  • Broadcast 2000, "the software the competition fears", is the revolutionary Open Source Linux software package created by Heroine Warrior (and now being carried on in development and service by LMA)...

    So why can't I find the source or binaries on their website?

    --LP, who just wanted to check what parts were truly free

    • by LinuxParanoid ( 64467 ) on Sunday March 31, 2002 @06:26AM (#3259431) Homepage Journal
      Hmm, they did cross-link to Heroine Warrior, whose site [heroinewarrior.com] says:

      After a long period of deliberation on the matter, Broadcast 2000 has been removed from public access due to excessive liability.

      We've already seen several organizations win lawsuits against GPL/warranty free software writers because of damage that software caused to the organization. Several involved the RIAA vs mp3/p2p software writers. Several involved the MPAA vs media player authors. You might say that warranty exemption has become quite meaningless in today's economy.

      While not related to either of these cases the distribution of Broadcast 2000 enhanced to unacceptable levels the risk of an individual experiencing significant financial damage due to the extremely expensive nature of high end video production and the high risk inherent in professional video business marketing.

      This has forced us to reconsider our liability protection at this time. We still plan to continue offering minor works for download and in the coming years, as the liability issues surrounding open source software are resolved, we expect to issue newer major works.



      Hmm.

      --LP
    • Looks like they had to take it offline for some convoluted reason. (I don't read legalese).

      After a long period of deliberation on the matter, Broadcast 2000 has been removed from public access due to excessive liability. In recent months the line between warranty exemption and liability has become increasingly blurred as more companies have liquidated and more individuals have begun to seek compensation. We've already seen several organizations win lawsuits against GPL/warranty free software writers because of damage that software caused to the organization. Several involved the RIAA vs mp3/p2p software writers. Several involved the MPAA vs media player authors. You might say that warranty exemption has become quite meaningless in today's economy. While not related to either of these cases the distribution of Broadcast 2000 enhanced to unacceptable levels the risk of an individual experiencing significant financial damage due to the extremely expensive nature of high end video production and the high risk inherent in professional video business marketing. This has forced us to reconsider our liability protection at this time. We still plan to continue offering minor works for download and in the coming years, as the liability issues surrounding open source software are resolved, we expect to issue newer major works.

      from Broadcast 2000 message [heroinewarrior.com]

      Where's my heroine warrior when I need him? sob. :-(

      Have there really been lawsuits agains GPL/warranty free software beacuse of damage that software caused to such and such corporation? This sounds like a farce to me. And what does this mean, "While not related to either of these cases the distribution of Broadcast 2000 enhanced to unacceptable levels the risk of an individual experiencing significant financial damage due to the extremely expensive nature of high end video production and the high risk inherent in professional video business marketing"

      I think someone like Richard Stallman or one of those hardcore open source/freesoftware guys should talk to these guys and knock some sense into them. Hey, I just thought of something...if they made their software GPL at one time in the past, then their source code must be floating around somewhere...unless they didn't distribute the source, which would mean they never were GPL, or were just violating GPL.

    • Broadcast 2000c (dated 15th May, 2001) is available from tucows [tucows.com].
  • Wasn't this the program which was voluntarily discontinued by it's author because of some legal reasons? There was a slashdot article about this some time ago... http://slashdot.org/articles/01/09/10/2016257.shtm l [slashdot.org]
    I guess they changed their mind about that...
    • It looks like this Linux Media Arts company is picking up the development and service on it.

      It's not clear whether it's still open source or not, and I don't have the background to tell you whether Bcast2000 was unencumbered enough to take out of GPL. Basically if the previous owners got assignment of all contributers copyrights, then it's posible they have taken future versions closed. The GPL fork will of course always exist to be built from in any case.
      • According to the Linux Media Arts website [linuxmediaarts.com], Broadcast 2000 is still an open source package, however I see no mention of it being under the GPL, nor any place to download it or the source code without actually being a LMA customer. My guess is that the software is open source while still being a commercial program (ie: not free-as-in-beer-or-as-in-freedom software)
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Umm, with a stock G4, including Mac OS X and lots of coole DV-editing/authoring stuff, and true cutting edge software a (relatively) cheap extra, it seems like there's a lot better thing around if you need a second-to-none DV editing workstation. Why bother?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Wasn't shrek made on linux running Maya? Linux already is in the movie business! (It's called...research)

    I'd like to shout out to my Windows XP box: as of now it has an uptime of 2 days 6 hrs 39 min and 55 seconds. A new record for Windows!! Yay!
    • At least animation studios are using linux for render farms. And why wouldn't they? Free of charge OS that is used for boxes crunching numbers days in and out. I don't know about Shrek and whether or not it was modelled under Linux. Quick Google didn't help me either, so some willing karma-hungry person can fill in the blank space.

      But, that's not the point. This actually brings linux to the world of professional video editing. This is a big step, and definetely one I welcome with joy. Now, if we only had truly good sound studio software to beat the living crap out of SoundForge... I know people who would change this instant to non-windows applications if they offered the same or better functionality and range of capabilities.

      • Karma-hungry? Never :-)

        But anyway, according to SGI's site [sgi.com], Shrek was produced using '168 SGI 1200 2U dual-processor Linux OS-based machines'... and some SGI Origin 200 servers... though the characters were designed using Silicon Graphics® O2® desktop workstations. Excuse the trademarks.
        I haven't got the faintest idea why they used Linux, though they say it was 'to bring more horsepower to the making of great films', which of course ought to explain everything(?).
    • Shrek is a film. This is a video capture card. The two are very different.

      Films are a sequence of files (one per frame) on disk, right up until they're cut onto negative. Video is not.

      Simon
    • I was sure you had your facts wrong. But apparently the last stage in DreamWorks's production process is now a "render farm" of Linux systems running Maya. I'm guessing that a lot of DreamWorks artists still use IRIX-based systems though. They're not going to throw out all their SGI workstations just because commodity/Linux/Maya boxes have come available. And I doubt if there's any Linux-based systems that can compete with SGI's high-end graphic workstations [sgi.com]. But that's gonna change, and soon.

      This is really bad news for SGI. I'd heard that DreamWorks was disatisfied with SGI, but they must be totally disillusioned to abandon SGI's famous massively parallel systems [ku.edu] in favor of a Linux cluster! Makes you wonder who will buy the Itanium supercomputers [com.com] SGI is betting its future on.

  • I took my uncle (big audio and video guy) to last year's linuxworld and he was severely disappointed that he couldn't find anyone coming up with any decent solutions for linux-based video.. he even got a few laughs on the subject. He felt that the system would be perfect to adapt for that type of system, and I'm glad that I can forward him this link to show him that some progress is being made and that he might be able to get a system to play with some time soon..
    • i'm working in the music industry: i do recording and post-production, which is pretty much the entirety of the music industry before video, marketing and sales. right now, for work purposes, i do my work on MacOS, using programs like Logic. i'm very interested in moving my work to linux, if software and hardware exists. i haven't researched it much, i'm not in a position to do so. does anyone out there have experience in audio editing in linux? any recommendations on how to go about the process of switching over? hardware/ software issues?
  • Ok, so I've got this Linux PC and its been chugging along ok I guess for the
    last 15 months collecting data and stuff, when I needed to install
    a plug and play LAN card.

    I rip off the top of the box and look for a slot, but the IDE cables are in the way,
    so I unplug them - just for a few seconds, to plug in my LAN card, and would
    you believe it - the fucking PC crashed. Bloody Linux - what a piece of shit.
    At least Windows has 'Plug and Play' which works. I mean, Windows upgrades
    have never failed us - we just schedule our hardware upgrades for the time of the
    day that the boxes decide to BSOD. This is quite a good feature if you really think
    about it - sort of a reminder to 'check to see if any hardware needs upgrading'

    Well I'm off to Walmart tomorrow to get lots of shiney new copies of
    Windows XP to put onto all our computers here. I have to do this, after all..
    ..National security depends on us.

    regards,
    Mr 'X'
    Chief Information Officer
    Some Major Government Department


  • by tcyun ( 80828 ) on Sunday March 31, 2002 @08:30AM (#3259818) Journal
    Linux Media Labs [linuxmedialabs.com] is another group that is providing video hardware that runs under Linux. I have seen motion JPEG work very successfully in a research environment (Internet2 [internet2.edu]) and I know that the test machines are being deployed. You can find out more about the test machines that I am talking about via [google.com]
    Google.
  • Target environments (Score:3, Interesting)

    by XNormal ( 8617 ) on Sunday March 31, 2002 @11:57AM (#3260529) Homepage
    I'm not sure how many video professionals would actuall trade their current desktop video production environment for a linux-based one, but this kind of hardware may be very useful for unattended video work - you know, the box that is sitting there in the rack and encoding, decoding, switching, inserting, etc.
    • by mr_exit ( 216086 )
      I'm a professional artist using Maya and Shake (highend 3d and compositing packages) both under maya. it sucks to have to have a win2k box just for puting out to tape. i was planning on getting a g4 so i can keep it all under a unixie type environment but this looks like a great solution.

    • this kind of hardware may be very useful for unattended video work - you know, the box that is sitting there in the rack and encoding, decoding, switching, inserting, etc


      My current work environment would definately welcome the chance to ditch the several dozen windows boxen it has doing just this type of work now. We also need some major beefy boxen for desktop video and graphics rendering in real time... in an Irix environment... so folks wouldn't be wholly hostile to linux-based stuff. Although I admit it's a major battle to get the okay to use Linux for anything at my work... including web services.
    • You might be surprised. One of the big video effects/editing companies is Discreet; they're not as big as Avid, of course, but they're second in popularity, I think. They sell Smoke and Fire (editing) and Flame and Inferno (effects), among other things.

      Those apps run on SGI workstations, either Octanes or Onyx 2/Onyx 3000s. The app is full-screen, and highly modal rather than windowed. No windows or menu bars or palettes or anything. It's a very different interface, and not intuitive at all, but once you learn you way around it's incredibly fast. I've watched experienced Smoke editors fly though the app faster than I could follow. Amazing.

      If Discreet were to port those apps over to Linux, I don't think any of the artists would notice or care. The underlying OS is invisible-- and irrelevant-- at that point.

      Of course, Discreet's next-generation product is going to be based on Windows XP. So it's kind of a moot point.
      • If Discreet were to port those apps over to Linux, I don't think any of the artists would notice or care. The underlying OS is invisible-- and irrelevant-- at that point.

        Of course, Discreet's next-generation product is going to be based on Windows XP. So it's kind of a moot point.

        Really? Hmm. I agree to a certain extent that the OS doesn't matter to the artist, insofar as the application takes over the interface, but in my experience, no x86 system has the bandwidth to keep up with Discreet's bigger apps (well, at least flame and inferno).

        Background: In 1999 I worked for a major FX house, where I rolled out (as sysadmin, along with the video engineers and facilities people) a bunch of flame seats on dual-R10K octanes. These were, according to the artists, 20% faster in practice than the 8-way R4400 onyx/inferno systems they replaced.

        Anyhow, these systems worked so smoothly because of their phenominal internal bandwidth. IIRC we had 8 ultra scsi channels multiplexed with discreet's stone filesystem - for a few minutes of uncompressed video - and 800 Mb/s (with a much higher real throughput than gig-e) serial HIPPI to sling frames around.

        I'm not aware of any x86 systems yet with the bandwidth of these (really 4-year-old) systems. The R10K onyx inferno systems they kept still had much life in them.

        Now, I could see these apps ending up on linux at some point, but flame or inferno on linux/x86 (or xp/x86) doesn't strike me as a near-term proposition. (If I'm horribly out of date here, let me know - I have been out of that industry since late 1999. What attention I've paid, though, suggests pc's just aren't there yet for high-end applications.)

        -Isaac

        • (Disclaimer: I don't work for Discreet, though this post may sound like I do. Consider me an experienced observer.)

          You're not horribly out of date. Flame still runs on Octane, albeit with next-gen graphics now instead of the MXI/MXE that you worked with. We use FC disks instead of SCSI, which means fewer channels. Discreet is finally getting rid of their Stream audio subsystem-- which was left over from the Onyx days, when there was no other digital audio in the computer-- and replacing it with optical audio input and output through a break-out box that has analog and AES spigots. (I don't remember if Flame did audio in '99, but it has now for quite some time.) But besides these things, the hardware and software haven't changed much.

          But the PC world has caught up, somewhat. The 64-bit, 66 MHz PCI bus offers something like 500 MB/s of bandwidth, which is plenty fast for standard definition, and acceptable for high definition. PC processors have gotten fast enough to be able to run mediocre, untuned code at acceptable speeds. And Discreet is using some mildly exotic hardware coprocessor stuff for their new product, if my sources are to be believed. Kind of like Avid's hardware DVE component, except inside the computer on a PCI card. Not sure of the details.

          The point, though, is that PCs are catching up through brute force. For example, Discreet's apps depend quite a bit on the digital media libraries bundled with IRIX, the SGI OS. These libraries, particularly ImageVision and dmedia, are largely composed of handwritten assembler code. They were tuned to the nines years ago, and have remained mostly untouched since the mid 90s. This allowed those old, slow (relatively) SGI machines to do amazing things in real time.

          Microsoft's media libraries have never been very good by comparison. But CPUs are getting to the point where they're sufficiently fast to get the job done at a much lower efficiency.

          Plus which, look at it from a business perspective. There's just not that much more work that can be done to Smoke or Fire, Flame or Inferno. The improvements that are happening now are either fairly marginal-- like the color warper-- or kind of half-assed-- like bolting various shared storage technologies atop Stone+Wire. If Discreet builds a sufficiently advanced system, maybe not revolutionary but good enough to convince their customers to buy it, then they're in a really good business position.

          Which is easier to develop for, Windows, SGI, or Linux? Which is easier to find programmers for? If you were going to start from scratch on a whole new app, and you didn't require one particular OS or class of hardware for any good reason, which platform would be your first choice?

          Yup. We can talk about superiority all day long, but the bottom line is that it's faster and easier to develop and deploy major apps on Windows. Assuming, of course, that your app doesn't do anything Microsoft might be interested in integrating into the OS.
  • the direction of the video industry will be very different.

    in the future, you will no longer need those mjpeg cards as hardware codecs as well as to generate real time effects.

    the new way of doing it is using 1394 to interface with dv devices. the fast cpu nowadays can do more realtime effects simultaneously than the cpu in the hardware cards include.

    for the professional world, they will be using sdi to do hdtv uncompressed. so buying expensive specialized hardware is no longer needed.

    just a note. avid is the industry standard in video editing software and systems. with their latest release of avid expressdv 3.0, it practically beats all competiting consumer products to the dust.

    :)

    johnlaw
  • Did anyone actually look at the page that this story links to?

    The card is not MPEG related at all. It doesn't do compression or decompression.

    It is a very high speed serial interface for high-end video applications. That is all.
  • when it comes to video editing, I am not in the market for a $3000 something :) [It's a legitimate market, and I'm glad people exist to whom that would be a reasonable investment in the pursuit of their art, I'm just not one of them.]

    However, I really would like (would gladly pay $50 extra for a distro that allowed me to *easily*, out-of-the-box, no-foolin', no hassles, do the following 3 things, with free software):

    1) import over firewire from a digital video camera (yes, it's possible; is it out-of-box ready from any distribution? Can I plug the cheap floor-model Sony digital camera I bought from Best Buy into a box running any available distribution which will correctly recognize / identify the hardware and let me haul in the video from it?]

    2) Set edit points something like iMovie allows on the Mac (I believe Windows now comes with a similar program, but I have not seen it), and then duplicate / rearrange / shorten / delete clips. Doesn't have to be pretty, just has to let me define beginning and ending points, and then assemble the resulting collage.

    3) Burn to VCD / SVCD

    That's it.

    Now, there are a lot of other things it would be nice to have -- color correction, titling, fancy fades and wipes, DVD authoring, complex sound capabilities, animations, bluescreen abilities ... but just simple "hone down to the best 2 minutes on a typical camcorder home recording, re-order, and burn" would be enough to satisfy me for a while. I'd like to be able to put my own recordings (if any are good) onto cheap CD-Rs to share with friends / family.

    I hope interest in video-on-Linux trickles down enough that a real, working, easy integrated package to do at least these three things actually reaches us. (Can be a pretty wrapper adding together separate programs to do each of those things, of course.)

    timothy
  • ...and while we currently use SGI O2s for our live insertion systems (I work for Sportvision, the people whoe brought you the virtual yellow 1st down line in football, etc), we're moving to a intel platform.

    Sgi is dying- They tried to make systems and their product revision cycles were just too slow for hardware consting tens of thousands of dollars... (not to mention that SGIs stuff is just dog slow for the $$) So... we're moving to the PC, hopefully Linux.

    For our stuff, we've found that the DVS card (out of Germany) works best- It does 66 Mhz, 64 bit PCI, simultaneous in and out, has up to a second of delay onboard (user selectable), and it has colorspace conversion on board. We've paired this board with an intel i860 chipset since it is one of only two boards (the other is AMD supplied) that does 4bit/66Mhz PCI and 4X AGP.

    The colorspace conversion is really the killer feature for us on teh DVS card (well, that and the fast PCI)- It saves us from having to do it on the CPU (which takes up a lot of processor at 270 or 540 Mbit/second!!).

    Our biggest wish right now is for someone to make good GL drivers for linux (glReadPixels has to be fast so that we can rendered video and blit it out of the AGP card at framerate) Currently the only one we've found to work well is NVidia's proprietary drivers..)

    We havn't tried the LMA card as my attempt to reach anyone over there was met with 4 consecutive seemingly intentional hangups.

    I'd love to use the LMA card, but at $3000 it just doesn't have all the features the the DVS card does for the price- ($600 more in quantity, and DVS hasn't ever hung up on us..).

  • linux use in the music industry? hardware? software? ....anybody?

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