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Is EDIUS Ready for Primetime?
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09/20/2011 08:55 PM
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TV Technology by Jay Ankeney I've been tracking
the EDIUS nonlinear editing software ever since it was introduced by
Canopus Corp. more than a decade ago, boasting some of the most advanced
codecs then available. After being acquired by Grass Valley in 2005,
the capabilities of EDIUS have increased exponentially. Today it seems
ready to be considered a viable contender in the accelerating NLE
competition for broadcast and high-end post.
"Because of the major turmoil in the boundary market between Pro A/V and
broadcast NLE systems, we are adding high-end features to EDIUS on an
option basis without rewriting its user interface," said Ed Casaccia,
director of product marketing at Grass Valley editing servers and
storage. "The really cool thing about EDIUS is that if you just peel off
all the code, what you have inside is an exquisitely efficient engine
for encoding and decoding video, making it a software-codec editor that
can even perform in a 4K workflow."
EDITING A GRITTY TALE
The proof is in the post, of course. But, this fall we should see the
first stateside release of a major independent feature film edited with
EDIUS, a feisty look at the British indie rock scene called "Powder,"
which was cut by director/editor Mark Elliott for Red Union Films in New
Ferry, England.
"Powder" is the tale of a gritty Liverpool group called the grams, and
you can tell they are representatives of modern rebellious youth by the
way the band's name is daringly spelled in all lower caps. Based on a
book by Kevin Sampson and starring Liam Boyle, Alfie Allen and Al
Weaver, "Powder" revolves around the grams getting a shot at a major
recording contract if their enigmatic lead singer can re-connect with
his long-lost writing partner. The problem is a punk-ish previous band
member has already stolen their hit song. read more...
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