Michael McLaughlin
Well-known member
Pure simple logic
Pure simple logic
MMOST love how you break it down.
Pure simple logic
MMOST love how you break it down.
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So let me get this straight. You feel that Automatic Duck's products (which are under $500) are "pricey," and you also feel that Crimson (which is under $200) requires that "you've got money," and that hard drives are affordable because they're "cheap." Yet, you seemingly have no problem whatsoever suggesting that everyone should have a Red Rocket card - which will cost $5000 (more if you need the breakout box). So I guess your feeling is that everything is too expensive for "normal people" like yourself unless the manufacturer happens to be Red, in which case it's completely affordable, regardless of the actual price. Is that about right?
So I guess your feeling is that everything is too expensive for "normal people" like yourself unless the manufacturer happens to be Red, in which case it's completely affordable, regardless of the actual price. Is that about right?
No one wants to have their content beholdant to a non standard format preventing them from repurposing their content when needed.
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Michael
Every leading platform should, in a ideallistic world, enable you to ingest whatever format without transcoding to a proprietary codec. Output format and standard is another "fast changing" topic.
Patrick
OK, this whole "free vs EDL" debate thing...
Is there any reason (and I completely understand that there may well be, but it's a question worth asking in my books) that there cannot be a paid-for version of RC-X and a free version? Perhaps the worry at Red is that a paid-for production tool implies significant support standards that make it difficult to justify?
Just thinking out loud here really, but I for one would quite happily pay a reasonable fee for a more advanced version of RC-X that incorporated EDL support. If supporting the software is the concern for you guys at Red, then maybe sell it fairly cheap (~$300?) without any support (other than perhaps a refund if your system won't run it - particularly on the PC side), and then have support contracts that can be paid for, or not, as you wish.
The indie guys (which includes us!) would love an EDL-capable (or even as Michael says, simply pull-list generating) RC-X type tool for low-budget finishing. There's plenty of tools out there for the bigger jobs/production companies when you want or need them, and plenty of post-houses we can go to if we don't want to invest in a system ourselves (we do this for bigger jobs currently, no problem) - but for day-to-day smaller in-house jobs, this kind of tool would be amazing.
At the end of the day, it's not a problem so long as tools like Crimson exist (any idea if Crimson will be compatible with the new RC-X?), but just a thought for those who want EDL support in RC-X and maybe an idea to break the deadlock - I agree entirely with the Red team that complaining about the functionality of a piece of free software is out of line... The solution, it would seem to me, is to offer to pay for it should it provide the functionality you require.
Either way, looks great and we'll find a way to make it work within our workflow, don't you worry!!
Nice work guys!...
Dom.
...Just thinking out loud here really, but I for one would quite happily pay a reasonable fee for a more advanced version of RC-X that incorporated EDL support. ..
...Alternately Adobe, Avid and Premiere could offer REDCineXML import.
You are correct sir.... Adding EDL/Conform support to REDCINE-X will be a somewhat easy task for the 3rd party guys... that's the way we are designing it.
That way everyone wins![]()