| bio | website | eecs.berkeley.edu/~loarie |
|---|---|---|
| location | Berkeley, CA | |
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 4 months |
| seen | yesterday | |
| stats | profile views | 16 |
I work as a Systems Administrator and a Technical Consultant to the Helpdesk for the EECS (Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences) Department at the University of California, Berkeley Campus. This has been my career for the last 24 years which began as an electronics technician. I worked my way to principal electronic tech and then crossed over to systems administration about 12 years ago. My strongest experience is with computer hardware and I am usually the go to guy when laptops and desktops start smoken or won't power up.
One of my most interesting assignments at Berkeley was in 1992. I was put on a special team with NASA trained techs to fabricate an assembly bound for the Arecibo radio telescope. This was a special 4 million FFT based spectrum analyzer for SETI project SERENDIP III under the direction of UC Berkeley physicist Dan Werthimer. I got to build hardware to listen for ET!
In my off hours since 1977 I have been working with music, still photography, and small scale sculptures some involving digital electronics. However in 2008 after a 35 year hiatus I have returned to my own independent cinematic (video) and music productions.
Presently I use a Sony camcorder (HDR-CX500v) and I use Sony Vegas Pro 10 as my main video and music editing suite. I have experience with both Windows Movie Maker and Windows Live Movie Maker, and I am a tiny bit familiar with iMovie. I also have a B.S. in Cinematography from SIU-Carbondale, 1974 and a M.F.A. in Electronic Music and Recording Media from Mills College, 1977.
|
Jan 30 |
answered | Mixer built-in DSP effects vs software effects |
|
Jan 23 |
answered | Tips for silently prompting people to not get too close to mics? |
|
Jan 20 |
awarded | Yearling |
|
Dec 21 |
revised |
How to reverse video in different software packages added 179 characters in body |
|
Dec 21 |
answered | How to reverse video in different software packages |
|
Dec 21 |
comment |
How to reverse video in different software packages Are you interested in Vegas Movie Studio and Vegas Pro? |
|
Dec 13 |
revised |
Reverse engineering: which video editing software was used on this video? deleted 2 characters in body |
|
Dec 12 |
comment |
Reverse engineering: which video editing software was used on this video? Hey Bart, I can't speak for iMovie but I know for sure you can not composite with Windows Movie Maker or the more recent Live Movie Maker. The CERN video has a least 4 layers of video going on perhaps as many as 5. |
|
Dec 11 |
revised |
Reverse engineering: which video editing software was used on this video? added 789 characters in body |
|
Dec 11 |
comment |
Reverse engineering: which video editing software was used on this video? You might get away with less, but I think the key is to make it easy and not spend more time than needed to wait for a render. The most important aspect is to have a 64 bit machine with at least 16 GB, E.G. my 32 bit quad core running Vegas Pro will barf if I put more than 5 video tracks on it for compositing. The CERN video has considerably more tracks, so hence more horsepower is needed. |
|
Dec 11 |
answered | Reverse engineering: which video editing software was used on this video? |
|
Dec 10 |
comment |
Why not filming computer or TV screens? FYI: Example where it worked, Low light situation where I was able to get my HDTV set to very low illumination with a camera shooting 1080i and rendered to 1080p here: vimeo.com/55295820 look at time makers 00:27 and 00:41 in this short video. |
|
Dec 7 |
comment |
Why not filming computer or TV screens? BTW: I was able to capture real time HDTV at home last weekend but the HDTV was only 1/3 in my field of view, but the trick was to bring the illumination down considerably to match a dark scene and to my surprise there were no moiré patterns. This video is not ready for release yet otherwise I would point you to a link. |
|
Dec 7 |
comment |
Why not filming computer or TV screens? By all means give a go to see what you get, at best I think you will see moiré patterns depending on the distance and focal length of your camera lens. |
|
Dec 7 |
answered | Why not filming computer or TV screens? |
|
Dec 6 |
comment |
Comment about a video I recommend that you watch more videos you like and see if you can contact the directors or others in the credits on more information. For instance, let's say you like the editing, you might address the editor and ask how he/she got a certain effect. Pro editing suites include Avid, Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premier/After Effects and Vegas Pro. Please note that some production companies will have their own proprietary software specifically written by their staff of expert programmers and editing designers. |
|
Dec 6 |
revised |
Comment about a video added 51 characters in body |
|
Dec 6 |
answered | Comment about a video |
|
Dec 4 |
comment |
How to tune a musicbox I would buy a cheap movement for like under $10 and experiment with it to gain experience before you start your design and first prototype. |
|
Dec 4 |
revised |
How to tune a musicbox grammer |