I'm A Very Understanding Woman-HD.mp4
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Joanne Pierce Misko: Our basic gear that we were issued was a gun, our creds, and a purse. We had to practice pulling the gun out if we can use it. I don't think we did that very often.
Susan Roley Malone: When we first went into the Academy everybody was very curious. We were the experiment. They thought, well, we have to put them through. But they\\u2019re probably not going to make it. So it\\u2019s going to be an experiment. And here we are today. We did make it.
Deputy Director Paul Abbate: You are true pioneers and the very embodiment of fidelity, bravery, and integrity. As the first female special agents at the FBI, you created an extraordinary legacy establishing the foundation which so many women continue to build and expand upon since 1972. And you serve as an incredible inspiration to so many. This gratitude and appreciation to each of you, and to all the first joining us here tonight, thank you all.
Sometimes in their daily lives, video engineers forget that not everybody understands the alphabet-soup of three letter acronyms (TLAs) that get used regularly in our industry. In this Back to Basics series of blog posts, I revisit core and fundamental concepts in video compression and delivery and attempt to explain them in accessible, easy to understand ways.
How much time do you have Deeply understanding the specifics of video compression requires years of study and is often the subject of research by graduate students in Computer Science or Mathematics. In this blog post, I will scratch the surface by explaining general concepts of video compression.
The above is true for the majority of use cases. For very high bitrate encoders where maintaining high picture quality is more important than saving bits (typically 50Mbps and higher), a GOP length of 1 can be used (that is, if every frame is an I-frame!). This is typically only used for broadcast or production quality and archival encodes.
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Frame rate means the number of individual images that are recorded every second. To give you an example, the cinema standard is 24fps (frame per second). The higher the frame rate, the smoother and sharper your video will appear, especially when movement is involved. Recording at high frame rates also helps you create better slow motion videos.
The A7 III does very well too and I can confidently push it up to 6400 or 12800 ISO. The A7R III and A7R IV are a bit below in terms of performance and ideally, you want to stick around 3200 ISO. You will also get better results by switching to the APS-C mode.
Timecode or TC is a time stamp on every frame of your video. This is useful in post production to edit with precision, synchronise or align footage. It is composed of 8 numbers divided by hour, minute, second and frame.
ALBERT VAN HELDEN (Utrecht University): What we have in Galileois a package then, of somebody who is mechanically and practically very good,somebody who is a great philosopher about nature and somebody who isambitious.
NARRATOR: But ambition drove Galileo to question the Church'sview of the world and revolutionize our understanding of astronomy. Ironically,Galileo himself was a faithful Catholic and gave his daughter, Virginia, to theChurch.
GUY CONSOLMAGNO: The images were very useful for teaching theology. Theearth is not the center of the universe in that it's in a privileged place.It's at the bottom of the universe. Only hell is lower. And there's a chain ofcreation reaching up to heaven.
And there was a sort of consensus, which Galileo felt very deeply, that inmathematics you had real truth. If there was anywhere where human beings couldthink like God, it was when they were thinking about mathematics.
ALBERT VAN HELDEN: Spectacles, compared to telescopes, are very lowtech. But they had been around for several hundred years. It was only whenlenses became available in certain ranges of strengths that one could take theweakest convex lens and combine it with the strongest concave lens and get anappreciable magnifying effect.
NARRATOR: The moon Galileo saw was Earth-like, and he sketchedits features with Earth-like detail. If the surface of a heavenly bodyresembled the Earth, perhaps the heavens and earth were not as different aseveryone thought.
Now, Jupiter was the one that was in the most favorable position forobservation. It was closest to the Earth at that particular point. And whenGalileo looked at Jupiter he saw three very bright little stars, invisible withthe naked eye, on a line with Jupiter, and he remarked on that.
NARRATOR: In a little more than a week, Galileo had found thefirst new astronomical bodies to be discovered since ancient times. Thisdiscovery clashed with the common belief that the heavens revolved around theearth alone. Eventually it would bring him head to head with church dogma, butfor now Galileo was exuberant.
ALBERT VAN HELDEN: He rushed into print because he knew he could getscooped. If we date the discovery from the first observation of Jupiter'ssatellites until he realized they were moons, uh, January the 7th toJanuary 15th, he was in print...by March the 12th thebook was out.
DAVA SOBEL:Florentines were known for arguing about everything, havinglively discussions, and that's what Galileo was about. And there was tremendousappeal for him and even more status in being attached to the Court of the GrandDuke. And there were friends of Galileo's who warned him that he wouldn't be assafe in his radical beliefs in Tuscany, that, that Venice had, had more of asense of independence from the Pope than Tuscany had.
OWEN GINGERICH: I would not say that his placing his daughters in theconvent was in any sense an act of faith on his part. In fact, it was an avenueof something to do with them because, after all, uh, their mother had only beenhis mistress. They were illegitimate, hence, presumably, not marriageable. Uh,so, so what to do He supported them but not very lavishly.
GALILEO:I decided to stand openly, alone, on the theater of the world,to bear witness to the sober truth. I believe that good philosophers, likeeagles, fly alone, not in flocks like starlings. I wanted people to understandthat Nature not only gave them eyes to see her works, but brains to make themcapable of understanding them.
INGRID ROWLAND: Bellarmine himself, who began interested in science, ashe progressed in science, realized that there were a number of aspects toscientific discovery that threatened Orthodoxy as he saw it, and realized thatscience might interfere with his theology, and decided at that point to shutdown his scientific investigations. And he made a personal choice to opt forpiety rather than scientific curiosity, which never, I think, is a completelysatisfactory solution. And it may explain some of his virulence in going afterwhat he perceives as scientific heresy.
Galileo was a good Catholic so he had no interest in fighting the Church. Whathe was about, from the very beginning of his public support of Copernicus, wasto bring the Church to an understanding of the theory and of the theory'scomplete lack of threat to the Church. If the Church struck a defensive postureabout something that looked like it had a very good chance of being true infact, the church would face embarrassment.
ALBERT VAN HELDEN: Up to this point he's been very bold. In 1616 he had,in fact, circulated...given to some Cardinals, a tract on the tides in which heargued that this is actual, physical proof that the Earth moves.
JULIAN BARBOUR: What is really exciting about Galileo and you see itexactly the same in Einstein, too, was the way he, he, he picked up what seemedto be an absolute impossibility. He said, \"we have this incredibly strongevidence that the Earth is not moving. Everything that our senses tell us, isthat the Earth is not moving, and yet Copernicus has got these rather strongarguments from astronomy to suggest that the Earth is moving.\" So then, Galileosays, \"Well, this actually should tell us something very deep about how natureworks.\"
JULIAN BARBOUR: There is a sort of a principle of relativity where, ifyou're sort of moving with the Earth, everything shares the same motion. Notonly is the Earth moving, but I'm sharing that motion as well. And, therefore,it is all hidden.
GALILEO:I find this very thin, cold air in Florence, uhh, to be mostcruel to my head and to all the rest of my body. Constipation, discharge ofblood, colds, over the last three months, I've been in such a state of despair,that I'm practically confined to my room, no, to my bed, without the benefit ofeither sleep or rest.
DAVA SOBEL:The convent where Virginia became Maria Celeste was aparticularly poor convent. Being a convent of the Poor Clares it was, ofcourse, committed to poverty. That was their way of life, their chosen way oflife. So they expected to have little to eat and to be cold in the winter andto experience harshness in, in every day's every moment. 781b155fdc