stokestack
Active member
Hi all.
If the RED codec is wavelet-based, I'm not sure when you'd want to use it. Wavelet codecs are lossy, which to me defeats much of the purpose of this camera. Fortunately, it looks like there will be plenty of options for output, but if the affordable storage options are only practical when using a lossy codec, that's a potential problem.
Granted, even the high-end CineAlta is mildly compressed. But there's been talk here of data rates like 150 megabits, which for the higher-res modes of this camera seems silly.
Thinking it through practically, the most important time to have pristine 4:4:4 is for greenscreen work, and that's usually done in the studio where portability isn't so important and you can capture to some big AC-powered device. If you're outdoors on location or in a vehicle or what have you, maybe a mildly compressed originating format would be OK. But there are still instances when you block something off on location with a greenscreen, and you'd rather not have a massive external device.
Eventually it would be nice to hear more about goals of the RED codec development from the Red guys. What kind of situations do they expect it to be used in, and for what will it be unsuitable?
If the RED codec is wavelet-based, I'm not sure when you'd want to use it. Wavelet codecs are lossy, which to me defeats much of the purpose of this camera. Fortunately, it looks like there will be plenty of options for output, but if the affordable storage options are only practical when using a lossy codec, that's a potential problem.
Granted, even the high-end CineAlta is mildly compressed. But there's been talk here of data rates like 150 megabits, which for the higher-res modes of this camera seems silly.
Thinking it through practically, the most important time to have pristine 4:4:4 is for greenscreen work, and that's usually done in the studio where portability isn't so important and you can capture to some big AC-powered device. If you're outdoors on location or in a vehicle or what have you, maybe a mildly compressed originating format would be OK. But there are still instances when you block something off on location with a greenscreen, and you'd rather not have a massive external device.
Eventually it would be nice to hear more about goals of the RED codec development from the Red guys. What kind of situations do they expect it to be used in, and for what will it be unsuitable?
Last edited: