Originally posted by Ross1441:[..]
Yeah.
This tour marks the first time that Desmedt and his team have archived video to such a great extent, and had that content to pull from during shows. Previously, they might have saved video from only one camera, showing a wide shot, as a reference, he said. They’re using an EMC Data Domain system to back up all the video data from the tour, about one terabyte nightly.
Desmedt travels with a full broadcast crew that films from more than 20 cameras during the show. All that material—expected to be about 50 terabytes archived by the end of the tour—will give the team more to choose from when they create DVD products from the tour. “I don’t believe in coming in and doing one show and putting it on DVD,” Desmedt said in an interview before the band’s July 14 concert in Boston.
Originally posted by Ross1441:[..]
Yeah.
This tour marks the first time that Desmedt and his team have archived video to such a great extent, and had that content to pull from during shows. Previously, they might have saved video from only one camera, showing a wide shot, as a reference, he said. They’re using an EMC Data Domain system to back up all the video data from the tour, about one terabyte nightly.
Desmedt travels with a full broadcast crew that films from more than 20 cameras during the show. All that material—expected to be about 50 terabytes archived by the end of the tour—will give the team more to choose from when they create DVD products from the tour. “I don’t believe in coming in and doing one show and putting it on DVD,” Desmedt said in an interview before the band’s July 14 concert in Boston.
Originally posted by Ross1441:[..]
Yeah.
This tour marks the first time that Desmedt and his team have archived video to such a great extent, and had that content to pull from during shows. Previously, they might have saved video from only one camera, showing a wide shot, as a reference, he said. They’re using an EMC Data Domain system to back up all the video data from the tour, about one terabyte nightly.
Desmedt travels with a full broadcast crew that films from more than 20 cameras during the show. All that material—expected to be about 50 terabytes archived by the end of the tour—will give the team more to choose from when they create DVD products from the tour. “I don’t believe in coming in and doing one show and putting it on DVD,” Desmedt said in an interview before the band’s July 14 concert in Boston.
Originally posted by Ross1441:[..]
Yeah.
This tour marks the first time that Desmedt and his team have archived video to such a great extent, and had that content to pull from during shows. Previously, they might have saved video from only one camera, showing a wide shot, as a reference, he said. They’re using an EMC Data Domain system to back up all the video data from the tour, about one terabyte nightly.
Desmedt travels with a full broadcast crew that films from more than 20 cameras during the show. All that material—expected to be about 50 terabytes archived by the end of the tour—will give the team more to choose from when they create DVD products from the tour. “I don’t believe in coming in and doing one show and putting it on DVD,” Desmedt said in an interview before the band’s July 14 concert in Boston.
Originally posted by pllsaph:[..]
Wow! That's an INSANE amount of data! It's going to take them until the *next* tour just to sift through and catalogue it all, never mind cut it into a DVD!
Originally posted by revjisok:[..]
the last sentence is exactly what is wrong with concert dvds
red rocks was one day and could only have been filmed that day.