Here’s the APE (A Photography Editor) blog post I’m reacting to: http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2011/06/17/vincent-laforet-the-future-of-photography-is-convergence/

I’m partly in agreement, total disagreement, angered and excited. But mostly I disagree and I’m pissed about these crazy claims he keeps making and then covers it all up with “oh but I’m not saying I know what’s gonna happen”. You can’t simultaneously say what you think is gonna happen and then absolve yourself from the responsibility of what you just said. Either say something or don’t.

My strong personal opinion is that although this convergence is very likely to happen, it’s going to be as slow-moving a reality as flying cars.

Maybe the savvy and rich buyers (like advertising clients) will take to it quickly because they can afford it and they are constantly connected to the ever-changing photography/video business – ie. they’re educated on the subject, like many other professionals that deal with photography and video; but first of all, the cost has to go down for it to become useful for anyone else.

Then there’s the issue of RE-educating your clients for the billionth time. For f***’s sake, wedding photographers still describe hi-res images to their clients as “Digital Negatives”!

Meanwhile, videographers are, I’m sorry to say, a major afterthought in a bride’s decision process. Not only is it an added cost, it’s also a product that offers little long-term gratification for the client. 99.99% of videographers offer what’s basically just eye-candy with music attached that they don’t have a legal right to attach in the first place.

That’s not to say videographers are crap, far from it, but they generally don’t offer something with the same lasting value that photography does. The simple reason is that it’s EASIER to offer something of value as a photographer than it is to do the same with videography.

And that’s the sad part, because wedding videographers are (usually) perfectly capable of offering something terrific for their client. It’s the client that can’t afford what really good production values cost. I’m not talking large crews, I’m talking quality work. Quality work takes time, money and effort on BOTH sides of the equation, and few people care to throw in any of those factors to get truly high-quality work.

Quality photography can easily come at a stupidly low price in the wedding business world. Elsewhere too.

And don’t forget, wedding clients are notorious for this by often suggesting that all we’re doing is clicking a button, so “how come you cost so much?”. They generally don’t understand all the rest that goes into photography BEFORE clicking the button, because we all hold in our hands what I feel are the most exciting stupid machines on the planet.

Then there’s the editorial clients. They don’t have quite as much money as ad clients, and from what I can gather, are still trying to figure out what the hell to do with video at all.

Video magazines aren’t mainstream yet, though technologically they’re beginning to surface, but even when they are mainstream, what’s the goddamn plan? Hmm? Do you continuously play every single page and let the consumer land on that page midway through an ad? Or an article? Or do you freeze a frame you think will draw in the viewer to click and watch? And do you know how quickly you have to get their attention? Depending on the total length of the video (which sets an expectation for your viewer), you have anywhere from 5 seconds to 30 seconds. MAX. And by the way that’s anywhere from 5 times to 30 times as long as what anyone would bother looking at a picture for.

Actually, that’s not true. In a picture, you get about half a glance. Mathematically, I suppose that translates to roughly 0.0021 seconds.

Then there’s the issue of being ignored. Because video takes up a lot of your time and effort as a consumer. Try being drawn into a simple 2-minute video while doing a dozen other things. Doesn’t work. You’re either in or you’re out. And once you get out of a video, you need time to get back into it again. So if video is going to inundate us “really really soon!!!”, then we’re going to learn to ignore them with 5 to 30 times the efficiency that we already ignore photography, because video takes time, and we already don’t have any of it in our busy lives full of Facebook and iPad and iPhone and Twitter and Flickr and Tumblr and blogs and texting and emails and AAARRRGGGHHHH!!! Only the best of the best of the best are gonna be able to cut through the crap, and they’re gonna ask the same rates that Christopher Nolan does. Please tell me who’s gonna be able to afford that.

You know how with really great movies, you can walk into a room with it already running, but you’re almost instantly drawn in and you can’t look away? That’s because it took millions of dollars to make that frame you walked in on look as pretty as it does. But then there’s the acting, the music, the sound and please don’t forget the most important part of all: the screenplay. Because that drives the conflict that you see almost continuously. And the multi-purpose exposition. And character development. And knowledge we now have but that the characters don’t. And on and on and on…

But we’re just talking about the best of the best from Hollywood. Not the crap some schmuck did where the story never goes anywhere, the acting is mediocre (or for the purpose of the film is non-existant), the lighting sucks, the sound is terrible and the music is missing and justified as such as artistic license. You think photography takes talent? Pffff… Try shooting a short film. I’m not gonna pretend I’m great at it. I’ve tried my hand at short films many, many times. I’m finally beginning to feel like I’m getting somewhere while still honestly having to admit that I’m nowhere with it yet. But film is INFINITELY harder than photography, and that DOES factor into whether or not there’s really gonna be any meaningful convergence.

Sure, Vincent Laforet doesn’t ask for Christopher Nolan rates and produces great work, but by his prediction, we’re all gonna be wandering around town shooting unbelievable RED Epic footage that we just threw into our backpacks that morning… And apparently we’re all gonna have 64 Exabytes (64,000,000 terrabytes) in the form of super-reliable SSD (Solid State Drive) hard drives (or hell – graphene hard drives!) that never crash and are totally affordable at just $199.95 so we can store and backup all this RAW footage we shot because we couldn’t be bothered to try and catch the right moment or because we needed 12 takes to get that fancy 2 minute single-shot in the can…

But if that’s the case, we’re back to the earlier problem of everything being ignored at a much higher rate than photography already gets ignored. Because EVERYONE will be doing this… Then what?

There are so many factors that Vincent isn’t keeping in mind that make me angry at those predictions… Of course there’s going to be a convergence… But 5 to 10 years?! Come on…  Maybe I’m one of the people who’ll be left behind when he turns out to be right much sooner than I’d expected, but I have a prediction of my own to make.

60 years from now, when all of our billboards look like the ones from Minority Report and are all in motion. You know what’s gonna look amazing then?

A still picture. Or a giant painting.

In a sea of motion, it’ll be what doesn’t move that strikes you most.

I’m not even gonna warn you; if you’re not interested in geeky video game stuff, the title already has you running in the opposite direction.

I’m not sure that I can call myself an avid gamer. I think avid gamers spend enormous amounts of time playing and I just don’t have that kind of time anymore. Even late at night, when all the work is done and I can relax, I usually choose to watch some TV over playing a game.

Now, even though I don’t enjoy a great TV show as much as I enjoy a great game, there’s a couple of reasons for it. The first is that if I start a game, I know I’ll be invested for at least an hour, and it’s already midnight by this point. I like my sleep. The second is that playing games makes me very tense. So not only will it be 1 or 2am, but now it’s gonna take me another hour to fall asleep.

TV, being the passive medium that it is, throws me into auto-pilot mode just in time for bed, all in the space of a 22-minute show.

Still, I do love my games.

And I recently pre-ordered my copy of Battlefield 3.

But today it finally dawned on me how far video games have come when, as I watched the beautifully rendered stills from the in-game footage, knowing full well that they look that much more spectacular in motion, I randomly and very suddenly thought of PONG. All I could see in my mind was a still frame of PONG (not that that’s hard to do) while my eyes were seeing screengrabs from Battlefield 3…

Holy cow…

So I can’t help but wonder how much further we’ll go in another 40 years of technological progress. Virtual reality has to be the next logical step forward, but let’s be honest, it hasn’t made the leaps and bounds we might have expected from it, nor is it as widely popular as video games. A computer is much more accessible. So is an XBox, a Wii and a Playstation.

So there you go… This is a photography blog, but I used to be a 3D Animator and I remember what it was like working for a gaming company. I’m still into gaming, so every now and then you’re gonna get stuff like this :)

Ok, remember my last post? No? Short memory you’ve got… :P

Scroll down. I’ll give you a minute…

Done?

Ok great!

Well here’s my first attempt at shooting the appearance of video using my photo camera!!

Alisha from Raji Barbir on Vimeo.

Not exactly great, but it’s very, VERY exciting for me.

Alisha is a close friend of mine with whom I’ve worked many times. She rules. She needed me to do some photography of her working out, but before we got started, I asked her if it’d be ok to do this so I could see if the concept would actually work.

AND IT WORKED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I’m guessing almost everyone reading this is completely unimpressed. But this is HUGE for me.

I’m going to start actively seeking out one female model or actress for an idea I’ve had buzzing around in my head for a music video.

Late-night story time!!

Ok, check this out.

I saw this really cool idea by a director on a fellow photographer’s blog to use the camera I have (the Canon 1D MkIII – a photo camera), with its truly staggering 10 frames per second, to produce an entire music video in a stop-motion style. Part of the difficulty in producing the video the way the director intended, was that he wanted to have off-camera, artificial lighting, firing together with the camera.

Now for those of you who are starting to get lost in my story, all cameras do this. All cameras that have a flash are capable of firing simultaneously with the camera.

ONCE.

Try it at 10 frames per second and what happens is that the flash can no longer keep up. The problem lies with the batteries, usually AAs, that run out of continuous juice after just a few shots. After that, you start noticing the flash skipping a frame, then two, then more, until you completely annihilate the batteries.

So the director’s solution was to just get a slew of really expensive battery packs called Profotos – every single one of which is more expensive than the camera itself – and had a giant crew milling around the camera operator, one to wirelessly pull focus, one to hold the light over the band/actors, another to wrangle cables, etc etc.

Giant production.

But it got me thinking… Ever since my house was broken into, I’ve missed having my video camera around. I haven’t replaced it, patiently waiting for Canon to please please, oh please announce a successor to my own camera model because it will, without a doubt, have HD video on it, like all other professional photo cameras coming from Canon and Nikon of late.

No luck on a successor to my model yet, but it’ll get there eventually.

In the meantime though…

Forget making a giant production like what that director did, forget off-camera lighting, forget big crews. I can direct again!

There is however one big problem with photo cameras shooting that fast.

Buffer.

The memory card that I slide into the camera has a limit in keeping up with how fast the camera is trying to capture data. Eventually, the memory card will simply say “busy” and a significant drop in the frame rate will occur.

So to figure out how long I could shoot before my memory card cut me off, I used my iPhone’s stopwatch to time how much “footage” I could capture before the memory card would quit on me.

Roughly 670 images within 46 seconds!

That’s awesome!! The 670 images is impressive, but the 46 seconds of “footage” is very useful. If I’m careful how I shoot, I could easily put together a music video, using natural light (ie. just the camera and nothing else). With a little more planning, I could possibly pull off a kind of “home movie” feel or footage that looks like stuff that was shot in the early days of film.

I don’t know if this is sinking in for any of my readers out there, but it’s blown me away. I was tired at 11pm and it’s now 1:30am and I’m bursting with ideas.

And speaking of how late it is, I didn’t pay attention to what I said until just now.

If my camera shoots 10 frames per second, and I shot for 46 seconds, why wouldn’t I have ended up with 460 pictures? Why 670? Probably user error, but it’s late and I do need sleep.

Day 21/365

Here’s my little stack of DV tapes for NURF Wars. It’s all happening this week! Very exciting stuff :D

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By the way. I didn’t misspell “NURF”. The movie is gonna have NERF guns in it. Sounds silly I know, but trust me, it’s gonna be awesome. I used to be a 3D wizard, and I use After Effects for all my movies, so I’ve got a few tricks up my sleeve.

Anyway, it’s kind of a play on words… or something… It’s a combination of “NERF” and “Turf”. The two had a baby and called it NURF. So it’s simultaneously “NERF Wars” and “Turf Wars”. Hence “NURF Wars”.

Smurf.

Whatever, that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

Day 19/365

I’m obviously a big Canon person. Here’s a shot of my Canon XL2.

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Day 10 of 365

Saying goodbye to shiny new(-ish), picture-taking gear is as difficult for me to do as it is for women to get rid of Christmas cards after the time has passed… All your friends know it’s time to let go, but you’re not ready yet, are ya.

And neither am I. But it’s time… So long, Canon GL2. I hope your next owner never takes you apart.

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