OK. I have a camera set up doing time-lapse now. I may relocate it to David Terry's loft soon, and will eventually have a long-term solution so we can make a high-res time-lapse movie over the next year.
Anyone have an old Canon Powershot series camera they want to donate to the cause? ;)
I should clarify: tethering would be better in this case because of the virtually unlimited storage space and battery power. But that harbortronics product looks very, very cool. I should take one with me out to the remote places I travel to and do some work with it.
Comments
shoooot. looks like I missed my opportunity to capture the demolishing.
Posted by: echeng | November 22, 2004 11:25 AM
Is the part of the building close to us going away as well?
Posted by: echeng | November 22, 2004 11:37 AM
Don't worry - I believe there's lots of destruction to come. :-)
Posted by: thedude | November 22, 2004 12:27 PM
OK. I have a camera set up doing time-lapse now. I may relocate it to David Terry's loft soon, and will eventually have a long-term solution so we can make a high-res time-lapse movie over the next year.
Anyone have an old Canon Powershot series camera they want to donate to the cause? ;)
Posted by: echeng | November 22, 2004 3:22 PM
Cool! I've always wanted to do something like this. My coworker makes amazing 1024 x 768 Quicktime movies with his digital cam and one of these.
http://www.harbortronics.com/digisnap2000.asp
Posted by: thedude | November 22, 2004 3:30 PM
Interesting. I would just use the remote products at Breeze Systems. Tether your camera to a PC, and you can do all sorts of cool stuff.
Posted by: echeng | November 22, 2004 5:44 PM
No HREFs allowed, it seems. The link is:
http://breezesys.com
:)
Posted by: echeng | November 22, 2004 5:46 PM
I should clarify: tethering would be better in this case because of the virtually unlimited storage space and battery power. But that harbortronics product looks very, very cool. I should take one with me out to the remote places I travel to and do some work with it.
Posted by: echeng | November 22, 2004 5:48 PM