Quote:
Originally Posted by lefteyewilly
he probably works at a videogame store, and those 120tb are from all the unsold ps3s they got :D
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lefteyewilly
he probably works at a videogame store, and those 120tb are from all the unsold ps3s they got :D
HD footage is a pig. Depending on your resolution Raw can be 200GB per hour of footage. Uncompressed rendered 8 bit in RGB is about 800GB per hour or 1.4TB for 10 bit. :yikes:
laptop1 - 160GB
laptop2 - 40GB
laptop3 - 40GB
desktop - 80GB
flashdrive - 1GB
zune - 30GB
351GB
Quote:
Originally Posted by pooon
Damn I remember shooting MiniDv and is only being like 12-13 gigs an hour... :yikes:
I'm sure it was compressedQuote:
Originally Posted by WannaBe_80z
oh i'm sure- it was just for school nothing fancy :)
That's one thing about the industry.
They make a standard then as soon as that standard is available to the masses they bump the standard.
Thats DV compressed 720X480 footage. Pretty much the standard for regular SD video shooting.Quote:
Originally Posted by yasunobu13
I just have to ask- what the hell is the purpose of uncompressed HD video that takes up 800 GB an hour? What kind of settings do you compress that with to get a 2 hr movie and extras onto a dual layer 9 GB disk? Hell blu ray is still only 50 GB...
There are both spatial compression (how do we determine the color of this pixel based on the previous pixels) as well as temporal compression (how do we determine the color of this pixel based on the previous frames). Both lead to quite impressive compression ratios, even when dealing with lossless compression.Quote:
Originally Posted by WannaBe_80z
Lossy compression gives even greater compression ratios by moving the image into a perceptual space and removing parts of the image that human eyes wouldn't notice anyway. Take a picture of a tree and change the color of a pixel in the leaves slightly and no one would know.
Pure uncompressed data is huge, especially for a movie.
One frame is 1280x1080 (or 720) pixels. Each pixel is 8 bytes. There are 60 frames a second, 60 seconds a minute, 60 minutes an hour. So:
1280 * 1080 * 8 * 60 * 60 * 60 = 2388787200000 bytes.
That's 2.2 terabytes for an hour of film.
**** video :)
PC: 80 gb
Lapotop: 80 gb
Mp3-player: 20 gb
Flash-drive: 512 mb
Total: 180,512 gb
Anyone with less?;)
Laptop :: 100gb
Externald HD :: 250gb
USB key :: 2gb & 512mb
Toshiba Gigabeat S60 :: 60gb (however I lost it, could be somewhere in my room)
So that's 352.512gb (412.512gb including S60)
Rest on DVDs.