Colorfront, developer of the On-Set Dailies system used in production, is putting its services in the cloud. This will be previewed Saturday at a user group meeting on the Sony lot and next week at the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineer’s annual technical conference and exhibition.
Colorfront Cloud Services — which the company said were developed in collaboration with certain Hollywood studios and post-production facilities — will begin to roll out early next year.
At launch, users can access these services via a “CopyCentral” feature that is new to the upcoming 2014 release of Colorfront Express Dailies and On-Set Dailies. It would allow filmmakers to upload original camera footage and the associated metadata to the cloud. Colorfront said that once the footage is in the cloud, services would include dailies transcoding, deliverables rendering and visual effects pulls, as well as turning over reels for final DI. It can also be used as part of a remote color grading pipeline. Uploaded material and metadata can be accessed by others in the production using Miso, a Colorfront-developed remote browser and player.
These services can be used in conjunction with technology including Codex Vault, PIX, DAX, Shotgun, Joust, Aspera high-speed file transfer and asset management systems from 5th Kind.
Clients have the choice of using Colorfront’s own cloud service in Los Angeles, a preferred private data center, or public cloud-based servers such as Amazon Web Services.
Noting that the cost of Gigabit connectivity is dropping, Colorfront managing director Aron Jaszberenyi claimed that using a Gigabit internet connection, one hour of encrypted HD footage (such as Arri Alexa ProRes 4444) could be securely submitted in 15 minutes, while 4K RAW camera footage could be uploaded in realtime.
Fee structure is still being worked out, Jaszberenyi said. On Saturday, Colorfront also plans to demonstrate the 2014 version of Express Dailies and On-Set Dailies, as well as preview Transkoder.
E-mail: Carolyn.Giardina@THR.com
Twitter: @CGinLA
Category: CJ Spiller Cecily Strong Nina Davuluri Navy Yard shooting Seaside Heights
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.