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  • The Films of Pixar Animation Studios Video Montage

    August 4, 2011 // Gradly // blog, Disney, Movies, Pixar Tags: A Bug's Life, Animation, blog, Disney, Film, Montage, Nemo, Pixar, Toy Story, video 1 Response


    A great video montage from Kees Van Dijkhuizen brings all the movie brought by Pixar Animation Studio starting form Toy Story. Enjoy it below.

    Over the years Pixar Animation Studios has brought us some of the most beautiful, exciting, hilarious and touching films ever. Not just a company, Pixar is a promise: the hopping lamp you’ll see in front of each feature film is a guarantee for a good time. Pioneering in and continuously revolutionizing both the animation and film industry, Pixar deserves an episode more than any other studio. The seventh [the films of] focusses on their 12 feature films, highlighting the moments that made Pixar what it is today.

  • Apple’s WWDC 2011 Keynote Video is Available Now

    June 6, 2011 // Gradly // Apple, blog, Cloud, Featured, News, Steve Jobs Tags: Apple, blog, iCloud, iOS 5, Keynote, OSX Lion, Steve Jobs, video, WWDC, WWDC '11, WWDC 2011 No Responses


    Apple‘s WWDC 2011 Keynote Video is available now and ..

    Here’s where you can find it.

  • Footage Shot at 2,564 Frames per Second with a Phantom Flex Camera

    February 14, 2011 // Gradly // blog, Rants & Raves, Tech. Tags: 1080p, blog, Camera, demo, demostration, full hd, FullHd, high speed, high speed camera, HighSpeed, HighSpeedCamera, phantom, Phantom Flex, PhantomFlex, slo-mo, slow motion, slowmo, SlowMotion, tom guilmette, TomGuilmette, video, vision research, VisionResearch 2 Responses


    Check out this video shot by Tom Guilmette in a Las Vegas hotel room in 1080p at 2,564 frames per second. The video shot using a brand new Phantom Flex high speed digital cinema camera. The result was spectacular watch it for yourself. Here is what Engadget had to say about it:

    Ever wanted to see flowing water slowed down to the point of transforming into a series of airborne droplets? This video has that. And more. A chap by the name of Tom Guilmette got to work with a Vision Research Phantom Flex camera recently, and, being the true geek that he is, he put together a video composition of staggering slow-motion footage. When pushed to its limit, the Phantom is capable of filling every second of 1080p recording with 2,800 frames, though Tom mercifully ran it at a lower 2,564fps speed. That’s still sufficient temporal resolution to let you track the wave of an impact’s vibration as it travels up a BlackBerry’s body — oh yeah, it’s as awesome as it sounds.

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