“Living in New Zealand, RISC OS user Peter Noble uses his RiscPC and Videodesk to edit film and produce presentations and videos for friends and family. Here, he talks us through how he typically puts together a short video.”
“Living in New Zealand, RISC OS user Peter Noble uses his RiscPC and Videodesk to edit film and produce presentations and videos for friends and family. Here, he talks us through how he typically puts together a short video.”
Pretty impressive: video-editing done with a 30 GB harddisk and using only 70 MB of his memory. Of course he first bought a 999 pound costing videocard, which isn’t supported any more. And nowadays, you get video-editing software bundled with your OS (in the case of Zeta, OS X and Win xp) and you only need a halfway decent graphics card and enough memory. But still, I’m impressed. I have to wonder: how does video-editing on a Risc PC compare to video-editing on an Amiga, the machine fabled to still be used in video-editing?
Re amiga bit.. I was wondering that myself. Supposedly, in small studios/whatnot, video toaster is still in use.
I wouldnt mind having that hardware for my RiscPC 700