Login  |  Register
Videoguys News Blog Twitter Videoguys News Blog Facebook Videoguys News Blog Yaoo Videoguys News Blog RSS Home Research Support About Us

aja_234x60.jpg sony-320x60.jpg ADVCG.jpg

The Videoguys' Blog is our way of instantly communicating with you. We'll post articles and reviews that we find interesting from all over the web as well as new product information and promotions.

All posts are syndicated via RSS so you can set-up the Videoguys' Blog in your favorite RSS reader and/or e-mail program. You can also follow our blog by becoming a fan of Videoguys on Facebook or following Videoguys on Twitter!

Nov
11
My Adobe (Non-)Switch Story
by: 
11/11/2010 12:56 PM

Bruce's Blog on PVC by Bruce Johnson

Premiere Pro Works For Me
I can clearly remember my first experience with Adobe Premiere.  It was in the early 1990’s, and I was working full-time in the News Department at Wisconsin Public Television.  I had managed to talk the news director into buying me a really new-fangled device – a desktop computer.  I believe it was a first-generation Pentium, maybe 90Mhz.  I had been into computers since about 1984, and had composed music and scored a lot of TV programs using Atari computers. Geekery was in my blood.  So once I got the Pentium, I was poised on the launching pad for what was to come.

And then I got a copy of Adobe Premiere, version 3 I think it was.  And I couldn’t make heads nor tails of it.  Strange, buggy, crash-prone, you name it, it was just not good.

I spent seven straight years on the roads of Wisconsin shooting news features with a reporter named Art Hackett.  Art and I would crank out a seven-minute-or-so package every week, which invariably culminated in him giving me a script at about 2PM Friday afternoon for a 7PM program.  In those days, non-linear editing for quick turnaround just had not been invented yet, so I spent my editing days in a three-machine BetaSP room with what I still consider to be the best purpose-built linear edit controller I ever used, the Sony 910.  So I would get to work, with my half-dozen to dozen shot tapes, a reel-to-reel deck to play back voiceovers, and maybe a graphic or two on the stillstore.  Sounds pretty primitive, doesn’t it?  Well, back then it was the height of technology, but not for much longer.  In the time that I was on the road, the Avid came to Wisconsin Public Television.  The first versions were off-line machines only, but over the years the Media Composer became more functional and powerful, and eventually came to dominate most of the editing WPT was doing.   read more...



CATEGORIES: 

Email | Permalink


Order online anytime! The Videoguys are also available to answer your calls:
Mon - Fri from 9AM - 5PM EST. Local Phone: 516-759-1611 Fax: 516-671-3092
©2012 Videoguys.com