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davidbou | 11 months ago
Now the same products are used for very small productions that don't have the budget for any studio camera (look typically at 50k+ for a camera without lens). In that case we try to provide a similar user experience and functions but with much more ffordable cameras.
Finaly more and more live productions are now handled using cine style cameras which don't have the standard broadcast remote panels and that's another area we cover, by combining camera control with control of many external boxes like external motors to drive manual lenses or 3D Lut video processors. Applications are on fashion shows, concerts, theater, Churches, studio shows, even corporate.
In the end Elixir is used for a lot of small processes which handle very low level control protocols. And then on top of that add a high-level of communication between devices either on local networks or over the cloud.
mcintyre1994|11 months ago
Just out of curiosity, what would be examples of very small productions here? Would an independent YouTube channel with great production quality be using this?
davidbou|11 months ago
One important point, if you are not live, then there's usually the possibility to adjust everyting manually on the camera and then finish in post production so our remotes are nearly never used outside the constraints of live productions.
One the opposite direction, I heard that they had around 250 cameras on Love Island but you can pretty much control everything from one or 2 remotes as there isn't a need for a lot of changes at a single time. The action only happens in front of a few of them. That said, we still have 250 processes running and controlling these cameras continuously.
lawik|11 months ago
I suppose FX30, FX3 and FX6 is in Sony's cinema line and may have all the color stuff that these systems want to tweak but I'm not sure. These cameras do get a fair bit of play on YouTube.