Friday 11 February 2011

Have online videos lowerd the standards of television production?

Have online videos lowered the standards of television

Online videos are a really big part of society today for example YouTube is the world’s biggest online video website. YouTube is good because anyone can have there say, but YouTube can be bad because people can downloaded videos and music for free.
Because of YouTube anyone can upload a video of anything they want if they have got an account. BBC IPlayer and ITV player are TV websites were you can watch any programme that has been on over a week, this is good for the consumer because they can catch up on a programme they have missed.
Internet hasn’t really affected the TV industry that much, but it has affected the music and film industry. Online videos can be accessed by anyone in the world with a computer and a YouTube account.
I think the internet is good for the TV industry but bad for the other music and film industries, I think in the future that the internet will expand and everyone will be able to watch live TV on the internet.  

How has digital world changed the way we consume and create tv

The Digital World We Create TV
How can you watch TV?
Watching the TV in the digital world these days is easy for example there are hundreds of channels on Freeview and Sky but now the internet has got involved by the 5 main stream channels BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Five, they all have websites were you can access a TV programme you have missed online for free.
Digital cameras are a lot better than tape or film because they can be uploaded to a computer or editing software a lot easier and quicker. Digital is also more practical than tape or film because it’s more portable than the others. Digital cameras are also better for the environment and they also can save the footage in different formats and different format sizes which can be better and easier to edit.
Editing has been improved through new technology for example new computers and technology have improved by that back agers ago they had to edit by cutting up parts of tape reel and sick them back together to create a scene. But in these days editing is very essay by uploading the footage to a editing software on a computer.

Brief History Of TV in the UK and Abroad

History of TV in the UK and abroad

History
UK television broadcasting has been around since 1936 when the BBC broadcasted the world’s first ever TV service.  The BBC also built the UKs first broadcasting centre in the 1930s.  After the first broadcast in 1936 there was a verity of new TV programmes coming out for example straight after the first broadcast a cooking programme came out. Other examples of this are in 1946 when the first children’s programme was broadcasted. In 1950s was the coronation of Elizabeth II in 1953 when 20 million BBC viewers watched the queen being crowned, there was also the first live TV broadcast on the air and then in 1954 there was a daily news bulletin. The first soap on UK TV began in 1955 called The Grove Family and then later  Blue Peter begins in 1958 and the longest running children’s programme.
BBC 2 launchers colour TV channel in 1967 and changed the way TV has been viewed forever. In the 80s a lot of popular TV show came out for example in 1981 Only Fools And Horse which became one of the most popular TV sitcom of all time.
In the 90s TV started turning into a digital broadcasting 24 hour news was now available and BBCs first digital TV channel. In new century (year 2000) is the digital age, were hundreds of new digital channels have been released. The first internet TV website was BBC Iplayer.
Video Technology
UK television is PAL (Phase Alternating Line) it is an analogue signal used in broadcasting television it uses 25 frames per second which is standard for normal television.


A lot of other countries use PAL as there television signal for example Spain and Australia. Most other country’s use the PAL signals because it is cheap and easy to maintain. Another popular TV signal is NTSC which is used by most of America and Japan. NTSC stands for National Television System Committee, there is not much different between NTSC and PAL apart from there is a small difference in picture quality for example PAL can have some grain errors if not tuned properly.
The advances from TV when it first appear in 1936 – 2010 has been massive for example at the start there was no colour in the television sets and programmes but change in 1967 to colour television which was the beginning were everything was starting to change for television for example more programmes came out and analogy is soon changing to just  digital signal, this will be good for people with good signal strength in that area because the picture quality and sound quality of a digital signal are a lot better than analogue signals. But for thoughts without good signal strength the picture will be distorted. Picture quality has also improved throughout the agers mainly due to the cameras used for filming programmes and the broadcasting centre.

Saturday 2 October 2010

Radio Jingle



In making a radio jingle we used the programme Logic Pro and started by making a 5 second indent to get us too making a project. After we had learnt the basics of Logic Pro we went into groups of twos and created a radio advertisement which could be anything you like fake or true. Me and my group created an idea where you could buy a time machine. We did this also with the M&S music over the background whilst I said “This isn’t just any time machine, this is the apple time machine”.
Making the advert was very fun and I enjoyed a lot and would like to do something similar in the future.
For the last few days of doing radio jingle we created are very own 30 second ident on Logic Pro, we started by recording are own voices using and microphone, and then uploading it on to logic pro, adding some (SFX) sound effects on of Logic Pro. This was my favourite part of creating my 30 second ident, because its fun listens to all the sound effects.
 For my 30 second ident I had to complete in half a day, because I was unfortunately was quite ill and couldn’t make it too college that day. So lucky managed to catch up with the others in my class on the last day.
Evaluation
Radio jingle has been one of my favourite lessons so far and want to use more radio programmes like Logic Pro in the future, because they are nice and easy to use. My last jingle is ok for only completing within a few hours on the last day. And think it could be better if I’m being honest. The good things about radio jingle are that I got to use the programme Logic Pro and got used to how to create my own music and radio files by myself.
The bad things about radio jingle were my own fault by not being there on the Thursday and that the programme logic pro was rather hard to get used too at first.

Overall I have really enjoyed radio jingle and hope I get a chance to do something similar again in the future.


http://www.supload.com/listen?s=gyiOsx  < This is my radio jingle (Jungle sed from Tim). Enjoy.

Pinhole Camera


Pinhole camera


Pinhole photography is lensless photography. A tiny hole replaces the lens. Light passes through the hole; an image is formed in the camera. Can be home made for example a, Pringles can has to be painted completely black inside, and then cut out a small square and put tin foil over it and then with a pin put a hole in it. Then put a flap of black paper over the front of the tin foil.
A pinhole camera works by light radiation from objects, for example a tree, which the light radiation will put onto photographic paper, by a pin hole on some tin foil on the side of the camera, which is inside a light broth can or tin. In the pinhole camera has to be painted completely black inside, because any light inside the can will ruin the shot and the photographic paper will come out completely black.

A pinhole camera is a simple camera without a lens and with a single small aperture effectively a light-proof box with a small hole in one side. Light from a scene passes through this single point and projects an inverted image on the opposite side of the box. The human eye in bright light acts similarly, as do cameras using small apertures.     


Step By Step

Step 1
Get a box or tin and cut a small square in the side of it, and paint completely black inside.

Step 2
 Put tin foil over the square gap and put a pin hole in the middle of it. Then put a black flap of card over the front of the tin foil.

Step 3
Put black tape over any gaps and then put the photographic paper inside the box or tin and the tape the lid on with black tape.

Step 4
Work out the width of the box or tin from then photographic paper called the F stop.

Step 5
Go somewhere where there is an interesting shot then remove the flap of black card for outside for mine was 30 seconds and instead was 5 minutes.
 
Step 6
Then when the card has been left off for the time you need, cover it back up and then go to the dark room.

Step 7
When in the dark room remove the paper from the box or tin then put the photographic paper in the first box of solution for 30-60 seconds then move over to the next box and rinse the paper for a few a seconds. After this put the paper into the fixer for 30 seconds the take outside the dark room to have a look at it.

Step 8
If you like the picture then put it back into the fixer for 5 minutes then should be a good picture and last for agers. You can the repeat the process with you want to.



Research and Development/ History

This process has changed and developed over the years through new technology which have changed pictures from only taking one at a time to taken from anything up to 500 pictures on a digital camera. Printing off your images have also change for example today its a lot cheaper to print of a printer at home than going to shop which could cost up to 6£ for 4 photos, and will also today takes a lot less time to print photos.


History


The basic optical principles of the pinhole are commented on in Chinese texts from the fifth century BC. Chinese writers had discovered by experiments that light travels in straight lines. The philosopher Mo Ti (later Mo Tsu) was the first – to our knowledge – to record the formation of an inverted image with a pinhole or screen. Mo Ti was aware that objects reflect light in all directions, and that rays from the top of an object, when passing through a hole, will produce the lower part of an image (Hammond 1981:1). According to Hammond, there is no further reference to the camera obscura in Chinese texts until the ninth century AD, when Tuan Chheng Shih refers to an image in a pagoda. Shen Kua later corrected his explanation of the image. Yu Chao-Lung in the tenth century used model pagodas to make pinhole images on a screen. However, no geometric theory on image formation resulted from these experiments and observations. This information was form: http://photo.net/learn/pinhole/pinhole
  

Analyses

My photographs are ok; my first image is my favourite one, which has a tree in the middle, it was taken in the park next too Suffolk New Collage, and the picture has backdrop of the park. But the photos are average. Image two is of the Suffolk new collage building around the back, the image is ok but a little blurry and is rather stretched. Image 3 is of another angle around the back of the collage, this is my least favourite image.







Image 1

Image one is of a tree in the park next to the college.
This was my first image and is my favourite out of the three. I change the photo on photo shop from negative to positive.



















Image 2

Image 2 is the edge of the park, next to the college. In the image you can see the fence of the park, also of a tree and a light post. I like this image, but it has got some dark marks on the corners.
I edited my photo on photoshop changing it from negative too postive.



















Image 3

Image 3 is ment to be of the college (around the back) but it has not come out that well. This is my least favarate image because its a really small photo, and is really dark. I edited this photo on photoshop.



Evaluation

The Photos

The photos turned out alright although there are a few finger prints over them. At the time they looked better than what I thought they would be. Some of the photos upside down and quite hard to work out what they are, on two of the photos.

Good and Bad 

Pinhole camera was good because it showed us how to make our own cameras and how the cameras have developed over the years, because pinhole was one of the first types of camera.
The bad thing about pinhole is that it is very hard to get a perfect picture for example if you leave the lens cover open too long then the picture will be all black and if you leave it open for too short a time then, the picture will be too white.

Over all pinhole camera for me was a success for me, (although I wouldn’t swap it for my digital SLR) and will want to do it again in the future. But hopefully the end pictures being better than these ones.