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View Full Version : New price, More Features for nanoFlash - Press Release



Mike Schell
05-07-2009, 07:34 PM
(Colorado Springs, CO, May 7, 2009) Convergent Design announced today a $2,995 MSRP price for the highly anticipated nanoFlash, which will ship in June, now with analog audio I/O. nanoFlash is the world’s smallest, lowest-power professional HD/SD recorder/player creating visually lossless Quicktime or MXF files stored on affordable Compact Flash media.

The diminutive (4.2x3.7x1.4” / 107x94x36 mm) nanoFlash easily mounts on any professional camera, adding less than 1 lb (400 grams) additional weight. The very low power consumption of less than 6 Watts assures long battery life, while the very wide power input range of 6.5 to 19.5V makes nanoFlash compatible with most power sources.

nanoFlash utilizes the very high quality XDCAM HD 422 CODEC (from Sony) at 50/100 Mbps (Long-GOP) or 100/140/160 Mbps (I-Frame-Only). Quicktime and/or MXF files can be played/edited in Avid, Final Cut Pro, Edius, Vegas and Premiere (restricted usage) without transcode or re-wrap. HD/SD-SDI and HDMI I/O ports support 1080p30/25/24, 1080i60/50 and 720p60/50 video formats. nanoFlash can also be used as an HD/SD-SDI to HDMI or HDMI to HD/SD-SDI converter.

nanoFlash records embedded audio over HD/SD-SDI or HDMI. Users can optionally input analog audio (stereo unbalanced line, stereo unbalanced mic or one balanced mic) via the 3.5 mm jack recently added. Audio monitoring is available via a headphone output. All audio is recorded at 24-bit, 48KHz sampling.

Two Compact Flash slots (32GB CF cards are US $75) provide 80 minutes of 100 Mbps record/playback time without touching the hot-swappable cards. Video can be played directly off the CF cards using a FW-800 reader (attached to your NLE) or transferred at 3X to 6X faster than real-time to your hard-drive.

Utilizing the same CODEC technology as Flash XDR, nanoFlash is capable of video quality compatible with D-Cinema movies and very high-end cameras, including Thomson Viper. nanoFlash can be used for a wide variety of applications, including tapeless recording, presentations, POV/field recorder, SDI switcher recorder, and video assist among others. The small size and lightweight makes nanoFlash ideal for skydivers, underwater video, 3-D, racing, jet planes, helicopters, medical and virtually anyplace high quality recording and/or playback of HD/SD video/audio is required.

The nanoFlash is scheduled to ship in June with a list price of $2,995.

More information including sample MXF and Quicktime files, a comprehensive FAQ and photos can be found at www.convergent-design.com (http://www.convergent-design.com/)


Editorial Contact:
Mike Schell
mike@convergent-design.com
Tel ++720 221-3861

SPZ
05-07-2009, 09:31 PM
Mike, great-no- fantastic news! I'm certainly considering your recorder with my next camera purchase. This is a revolution in itself... Mpeg 2 4:2:2 100Mbs Long GOP is a fantastic codec. What are the minimum CPU requirements to edit this? (I'm using both Macpro octo 2.8ghz and a Macbook Pro 2.66Ghz)

Sumfun
05-07-2009, 10:07 PM
Cool. Could you please clarify if the analog audio input is in addition to the audio in the SDI stream? That is - can we record 4 channels of audio on the Nano Flash?

Mike Schell
05-08-2009, 03:13 PM
Cool. Could you please clarify if the analog audio input is in addition to the audio in the SDI stream? That is - can we record 4 channels of audio on the Nano Flash?

I think we can add the analog channels and the SDI/HDMI embedded audio together into 4 separate tracks. We have this on our list of engineering projects and should have a definitive answer in the next 6-8 weeks, but I can say it looks likely.

Mike Schell

Emanuel
05-08-2009, 04:45 PM
Mike, great-no- fantastic news! I'm certainly considering your recorder with my next camera purchase. This is a revolution in itself... Mpeg 2 4:2:2 100Mbs Long GOP is a fantastic codec. What are the minimum CPU requirements to edit this? (I'm using both Macpro octo 2.8ghz and a Macbook Pro 2.66Ghz)Yes, this is a revolution and democratization. The point is if there is anyone out there who may hack the 5D Mark II (or GH1) for Live HDMI capture or must we wait for what reserves us Samsung?

ecking
05-08-2009, 06:20 PM
Damn this thing sounds amazing and the price is right too!