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Old January 26th, 2014 #1
Sam Emerson
Diversity = White Genocide
 
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Default A video recorder cost $45,000 in 1956

The advertised price for the Ampex Videotape Recorder in late 1956 was $45,000.
Quadruplex_videotape Quadruplex_videotape

Adjust for inflation and that's $374,933 in 2012 money. That's for the video recorder only, no camera. The huge cameras of the era weighed close to a ton and the electronics were in a big rack. It was impossible to build a self contained camera with both the lenses and the electronics using the tube technology of the fifties. A one hour reel of videotape cost $300, $2499 in 2012.

For $374,933 you could build a pretty decent television production studio today, building included. Without the broadcast transmitter of course.

Substitute the internet for broadcasting and you're in business.
 
Old January 26th, 2014 #2
M. Gerard
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sam Emerson View Post
The advertised price for the Ampex Videotape Recorder in late 1956 was $45,000.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadruplex_videotape

Adjust for inflation and that's $374,933 in 2012 money. That's for the video recorder only, no camera. The huge cameras of the era weighed close to a ton and the electronics were in a big rack. It was impossible to build a self contained camera with both the lenses and the electronics using the tube technology of the fifties. A one hour reel of videotape cost $300, $2499 in 2012.

For $374,933 you could build a pretty decent television production studio today, building included. Without the broadcast transmitter of course.

Substitute the internet for broadcasting and you're in business.
You could get a decent, new, three bedroom, one bath home with garage for about $10,000 in those days.
 
Old January 26th, 2014 #3
Sam Emerson
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M. Gerard View Post
You could get a decent, new, three bedroom, one bath home with garage for about $10,000 in those days.
So $45,000 for a video recorder was a serious impediment to any would-be broadcast media moguls. It's not surprising that the Jews who ran radio ended up running all three television networks. I'd love to know how much those fifties video cameras cost. The video camera in a smartphone probably has better quality today.
 
Old January 26th, 2014 #4
Sam Emerson
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http://www.thedvshow.com/how-much-do...cost-to-build/

If you want to convert a room into an inexpensive TV studio, your most important step is to select a problem-free space. An attic, for instance, might get too hot and cost a fortune to air condition. The basement might be under a heavily traveled kitchen or corridor requiring you to insulate against the sound of footsteps. The whir of an air conditioner, the roar of a furnace, the whine of a pump, or even the deedle-deedle of a nearby telephone or alarm can be very expensive to seal out. In short, you need to pick a quiet place with plenty of electricity and no unusual heating problems.

Some sounds can be controlled easily. Pumps, furnaces, air conditioners, and other motors can be turned off during the shoot and turned back on again afterwards. It is the “surprise” sounds of telephones, footsteps, barking dogs, and other people’s air conditioners that will be harder for you to control.

Basements usually make good mini studios; their walls are generally concrete and soundproof — outside the walls, nothing is as quiet as dirt. Your biggest sound infiltration will be from overhead or maybe from a nearby furnace, or crickets, or whatever else makes noise in your basement. The trouble with basements is that they generally have low ceilings, making it hard to hang lights.

Attics often have peaked roofs leaving plenty of space for lights, and footsteps from the floor below are seldom heard (or are easily hidden if you cover the attic floor with a thick carpet). Attics are susceptible to jet plane and outside vehicle noises, as well as rain, thunder, and the occasional weed whacker next door.

A garage often makes a great studio because it has a large open floor space (when the car isn’t there) and often has a high ceiling (good for lights). If the garage is in the basement or in a separate building, noise infiltration may be low. Garage doors are notoriously loose, however, and may let in a lot of sound.
 
Old January 26th, 2014 #5
Sam Emerson
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If you ask a video pro how much it will cost they'll say a million dollars, but they would. They're in the business of renting out video production space! They don't want their corporate clients to start building in house studios to produce their training and sales videos.

It's also a trade off between money and time, as are most projects. Unwanted noise, which is the most expensive thing to control, can be worked around as long as you're not going out live. You have to wait out a plane flying overhead, or the weed wacker next door. You can schedule shooting at night when it's quiet, assuming you're not in a city that never sleeps.

If you have enough money you can build a soundproof studio. Though I've seen plenty of outtakes and heard stories about Hollywood productions being held up by sound problems in spite of their virtually unlimited budgets for professional studio space.

With digital video and audio editing a white nationalist organization could easily put out a very professional looking updated American Dissident Voices. Though someone other than Strom should probably be sought out as news reader.
 
Old January 27th, 2014 #6
Sam Emerson
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Default Television history links

Video Control Room at the NBC TV Studios in Burbank, California. The controls are for a RCA TK- 40 Color Camera. Photo taken in 1955.
The new studio cost NBC $3,716,000.00!!

http://www.pharis-video.com/p768.htm

That would be $31,425,604 in 2012 money.

Best early television technology history site.

http://www.eyesofageneration.com/home.php

More than you need to know about the first color video cameras.

http://www.kingoftheroad.net/colorTV...in-action.html
 
Old January 27th, 2014 #7
M. Gerard
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I heard a kid in a rock band say that they used mattresses to sound-proof a room. He said it worked great.
 
Old January 28th, 2014 #8
Sam Emerson
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M. Gerard View Post
I heard a kid in a rock band say that they used mattresses to sound-proof a room. He said it worked great.
Not a bad idea.

At the rate the professional media technical standards are falling (watch some reality shows) and inexpensive media technology is improving we should reach quality convergence soon, if we haven't already. Talent is where the Jew media is still far ahead of us. They may be scum but they know how to cast an anchorman to tell their lies as persuasively as possible. Our truth rings false coming from a creepy oddball.
 
Old February 1st, 2014 #9
Alex Linder
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What's sad is seeing things I paid thousands for when I was running a small print publishing company in the early ninties now going for two bucks at Salvation Army. Lugged my crap around for years before conceding the obvious. Tech is one industry where you continually get more for less, so I guess we have to give that a thumbs up.
 
Old February 2nd, 2014 #10
Sam Emerson
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alex Linder View Post
What's sad is seeing things I paid thousands for when I was running a small print publishing company in the early ninties now going for two bucks at Salvation Army. Lugged my crap around for years before conceding the obvious. Tech is one industry where you continually get more for less, so I guess we have to give that a thumbs up.
Laser printer? I'm reading the old Instauration magazine that someone scanned and put online. They talk about having trouble finding a typesetter willing to typeset pro-white books (this was in 1976). The work would sometimes be done after hours so no one would see what kind of book they were producing.

All those barriers have come down. The technology available today could be used to compete with the Jews in every medium. Based on how fast the culture has changed since television was introduced it's the most powerful propaganda weapon ever invented, if it's used properly.

The Jews have become skilled at using it properly. The last whites who used the media with some skill were the National Socialists, mostly through print, radio and film (television existed, but it was experimental).

Inexpensive video and internet distribution let anyone create a "TV network" for less than the cost of one 1956 color video camera. This is the first time since 1945 that the most powerful audio-visual tools have been available to whites without filters. We need a Goebbels to organize it.
 
Old March 20th, 2014 #11
Sam Emerson
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Default Video Editing Software

From lowest to highest price selected video editing software available on Amazon.

From the descriptions all should be able to easily handle editing multiple camera footage, not in real time, but later (once you transfer all the footage to your computer) something like the way live or slightly delayed video programming (newscasts, talk shows, soaps) are edited.

I didn't include Adobe Premiere Elements 12, the low cost version of the most expensive program, because the reviews were terrible.

I classify Premiere Pro as most expensive because you rent it for $19.99 a month. Assuming a useful product life of two years (with rapid advances in software you probably will want to upgrade any package two years from now, especially in a resource hungry field like video rendering) that's around $480, five times what the other two products cost.


Amazon.com: Cyberlink PowerDirector 12 Ultimate: Software Amazon.com: Cyberlink PowerDirector 12 Ultimate: Software

Cyberlink PowerDirector 12 Ultimate
List Price: $129.99
Price: $94.83 & FREE Shipping. Details
Deal Price:
You Save: $35.16 (27%)

* Extra Creative Effects 2 professional effect packs from world-class NewBlueFX - Video Essentials II and III, plus 3 CyberLink Creative design Packs
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* Stunning Effects: More Built-in High-Quality Effects, Motion Blur Effect, One-click Color Presets, Extra Creative Effects, etc
* World's Fastest Post-production: Native 64-bit Support, TrueVelocity 4 Engine, 40% Faster H; 264 Encoding, Optimized for Intel 4th Gen CoreTM
* PCMag Verdict - Its impressive performance, intuitive interface, and boatload of editing goodies make for PowerDirector's winning combination

The Fastest Video Editing Software for Enthusiasts

PowerDirector 12 Ultimate provides the most comprehensive tools for high quality video productions, all with easy-to-use features. PowerDirector 12 boasts even faster processing and rendering speed compared to its predecessor. The new TrueVelocity 4 Engine is 40% faster in H.264 encoding, and also is optimized for Intel 4th Generation CoreTM Technology (Haswell) that allows users to enjoy 3 times faster rendering with AVX2 technology. PowerDirector 12 Ultimate also includes premium effects and templates to further enrich your video creation.
Take Video Creation to a Whole New Level

If you are passionate about video creation, it's time to elevate your creations to a whole new level. PowerDirector 12's new MultiCam Designer supports up to 4 camera editing, so you can easily import, sync, and arrange your MultiCam shots. The new Theme Designer help you to generate professional-looking 3D animated videos with your videos and photos.

New Multiple Camera Editing

The new MultiCam Designer allows you to simulate live camera switching from 4 cameras by selecting and editing the best camera angle and sequence from an event that you have simultaneously captured with your camcorder, DSLR, digital camera and Smartphone. Synchronize the tracks by audio, timecode or time taken. Easily switch between shots with hotkeys and instantly create multiclip track recording.

Amazon.com: Sony Movie Studio 13 Suite: Software Amazon.com: Sony Movie Studio 13 Suite: Software

Sony Movie Studio 13 Suite
List Price: $139.95
Price: $104.98 & FREE Shipping. Details
Deal Price:
You Save: $34.97 (25%)

* A complete suite for your digital life
* Contains: Movie Studio 13 Platinum, ACID Music Studio 10, Sound Forge Audio Studio 10
* Extras: Boris FX Continuum Units, FXHOME Hit Film plug-ins, iZotope Vocal Eraser, NewBlueFX 3D Titling and Video Effects, Studio Devil British Valve Custom Guitar Amp, 50 Sony Sound Series: Production Music Soundtracks
* Create video in beautiful 4K (ultra HD) XAVCS or AVCHD, develop original music, and enhancemultichannel audio
* Weave your ideas into videos that can be uploaded directly to Facebook or burned toa DVD or Blu-ray Disc

Movie Studio Suite brings four impressive Sony applications together to produce a complete multimedia experience. Create video in beautiful 4K XAVC S (Ultra HD) or AVCHD, develop original music, and enhance multichannel audio. Stylize your movies with high-quality video effects, transitions, titles, and filters. Create professional music productions with MIDI, effects processing, and audio recording tools. Record, edit, process, render, and share audio. Take control of your own creativity and make movies that matter. Weave your ideas into high-quality videos that can be uploaded directly to YouTube and Facebook or burned to a DVD or Blu-ray Disc!

Amazon.com: Adobe Premiere Pro CC [Digital Membership]: Software Amazon.com: Adobe Premiere Pro CC [Digital Membership]: Software

Adobe Premiere Pro CC [Digital Membership]
1 month Plan Price: $29.99 per month
Price: $19.99 per month
You Save: $10.00 (34%) per month

* Adobe Premiere Pro CC is powerful, customizable, and high-performance nonlinear editing software for video professionals.
* Membership includes the full version of Adobe Premiere Pro CC to download, install, and run on your computer.
* Immediate access to all the latest updates and new features as soon as they're released.
* Easy syncing of your Adobe Premiere Pro settings to any computer in any edit bay in the world
* A growing library of expert video tutorials to help you get up to speed quickly and master new skills

Adobe Premiere Pro CC — Part of Adobe Creative Cloud

Edit video faster and more fluidly than ever before with the powerful, more connected Adobe Premiere Pro CC. Dozens of brand-new features, including a redesigned timeline, improved media management, and streamlined color grading, allow you keep the focus on your creative work.

Because Adobe Premiere Pro CC is part of Creative Cloud, you get immediate and exclusive access to all the latest updates and new features as soon as they’re released, and you always control when to download and install them. You can also conveniently sync settings between your computers; tap into a free and growing library of expert training videos from Adobe and others; and showcase your work on Behance.

Download, install, and run the full version on your own computer, and conveniently manage your subscription from your games and software library.

Product Features

* The powerful, customizable, and high-performance nonlinear editing software for video professionals
* The full version of Adobe Premiere Pro CC to download, install, and run on your computer
* Immediate access to all the latest updates and new features as soon as they’re released
* Easy syncing of your Adobe Premiere Pro settings to any computer in any edit bay in the world
* A growing library of expert video tutorials to help you get up to speed quickly and master new skills
* A professional online portfolio with Behance ProSite, where you can showcase posters, artboards, photos, and other collateral from your video projects
* Installation on up two computers — Mac or PC
 
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