As you probably know, we’re big fans of DSLR video around here at Engadget. From shooting product demos , to producing the Engadget Show , if we shot the video, it was likely done with one of these single-lens cameras: they’re convenient and capable of beautiful moving images but often leave much to be desired by way of form factor when it comes to video . While Canon and Nikon are slapping on articulating LCDs and calling it a day, Panasonic has upped the ante with its new AG-AF100 camera. Teased way back in April , Panny just dropped a press release announcing that its newest piece of video hardware is now being delivered, making a nice late holiday gift for any wannabe filmmakers that you really, really like. Basically, the AF100 is what happens when you stuff the innards of a DLSR into the body of a video camera and slap some interchangeable lenses in front of it. Listing at $4,995, the AF100 rocks a Micro Four Thirds sensor that records to dual SD cards in AVCHD and outputs 8-bit uncompressed 4:2:2 video to an external recorder via an HD-SDI connection. It also attempts to solve the audio issues plaguing DSLR video shooting (namely, the difficulty of getting pro-level audio to play nice with a camera designed only for imaging) with its two phantom-powered XLR audio inputs and built-in stereo microphone. Panasonic is also claiming to have lessened aliasing and the dreaded “jellycam” found in DSLR video with an optical low pass filter and faster scanning, while still boasting the wide viewing angle and shallow depth of field that movie-makers (and Vimeo users) know and love to death. We’ll be doing a full review of the AF100 as soon as we can get our hands on it; in the meantime, head on past the break for the full PR. Continue reading Panasonic AF100 Micro Four Thirds video camera ships today, right on schedule Panasonic AF100 Micro Four Thirds video camera ships today, right on schedule originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Dec 2010 19:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …An Oklahoma farmer is feeling grateful toward a local TV station after the station’s news chopper helped a calf that was stuck on a frozen pond get to safety. (Dec. 27)
Continue reading …enlarge It’s no secret that we’re big Buffy fans here at C&L, and one of my favorite characters is bad-girl vampire slayer Faith, played by actress Eliza Dushku. She’s turning 30 this year, and she’s using the occasion for a very special fundraising effort. In a time when most actresses seem obsessed with plastic surgery, high fashion and Botox, it’s nice to know there’s one who’s beautiful on the inside, in the best possible way. If you can, please contribute. Via Tonic.com: Eliza Dushku recently got in touch with Tonic to tell us what she wants for her 30th birthday on Dec. 30. Er, actually she told us what she doesn’t want — anyt hing . Instead, she’s asking everyone to join her 30/30/30 goal to raise the $30,000 it will take to acquire the land to build a comprehensive recovery center for former child soldiers in Gulu, Uganda . You see, the fact that Duskhu’s mother has been an African politics professor for more than 40 years is more than a bit of Hollywood trivia — it colors how Dushku sees the world.”As my mother’s daughter, and turning 30, I’m realizing how many stories I want to tell about the people of the world. I’m an internationalist at heart,” she tells Tonic. At this turning point in her life, she wants to help children affected by Uganda’s civil war. She’s counting on your help to do so. Mentioning her young niece and nephew, she says, “Think of these kids being forced to become killers. I can’t imagine anything more horrifying.”Constructing and running the rehabilitation center is the mission of THARCE-Gulu ( T rauma H ealing a nd R eflection Ce nter), the nonprofit organization her mom, Judith Dushku of Boston’s Suffolk University, recently founded with colleagues on the ground in Uganda. It will focus mainly on women and their children who are still recovering from abduction and sex slavery suffered during Uganda’s civil war. Click here to donate to THARCE-Gulu . The idea was sparked in July 2009, when Dushku went to Gulu with her mother, her boyfriend, Rick Fox, and a group of students on a trip focused on the rehabilitation and reintegration into society of former child soldiers and other victims of war. “Kids are still coming out of the bush, “she says, “after being grabbed out of bed in the middle of the night and handed an AK-47.” She can’t forget the people she met, including a group of teenagers who had been soldiers and a woman who had been forced into sex slavery and now runs a successful bead business. She also can’t shake the things she saw, like the wheelchair basketball game among people who lost legs in the war and the practice of putting a boy whose family was killed and the boy who killed them on the same sports team. What especially touched her, she says, is “what you learn about forgiveness. We get so resentful and we hold grudges over so many trivial things here. To be able to forgive someone who macheted your entire family and to live as neighbors, that’s amazing.” THARCE-Gulu’s blueprints are drawn up. The team is in place. The curriculum, which includes film-making, music and art therapy workshops, is planned. Now all that’s needed is a building and the plot of land to put it on. Please spread the word and, if you can, donate to wish Eliza a happy birthday.You can also learn more about THARCE-Gulu at its website here.
Continue reading …Photos via IFAW ‘Tis the season for heart-warming stories. This one is about eight endangered gyrfalcons, who were recently released back to the wild after being seized by customs officials in Moscow. The birds were found “swaddled in cloth, hooded and packed four to a box,” according to the International Fund for Animal Welfare . … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Previous research has suggested that moms who are overweight or obese before they get pregnant are at risk for having offspring with behavioral such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and cognitive problems, but a new study shows this is not the case.
Continue reading …Natalie Portman is pregnant and is engaged, R and B legend Teena Marie dies and Hefner gets engaged to a Playmate again. (Dec. 27)
Continue reading …Ending Sunday's “Face the Nation” in poetic fashion, CBS's Bob Schieffer gave a year-end commentary where he portrayed John Boehner as the flustered “orange-faced” leader of a divided House GOP. Schieffer also snidely criticized the Arizona immigration law. “His face was bright orange, a sun-tan hall-of-famer. / I knew in a flash – it must be John Boehner,” spoke Schieffer, painting the soon-to-be Majority Leader as the head of a herd of reindeer, the House Republicans. “He hollered, cajoled, oh how he did plead, / But the deer wouldn't listen, each wanted to lead.” Composing his end-of-show commentary to verse, Schieffer summarized the 2010 political scene and provided some insight of his own as to how the next two years in Washington will unfold. Though Democrats met a bitter fate this November, Schieffer implied a possible downfall for the GOP with a split between Tea Partiers and incumbent Republicans.
Continue reading …Leading rabbi presents new version of letter pertaining to selling, leasing apartments to non-Jews
Continue reading …When conservative radio hosts like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck take stands against Obama-care or amnesty for illegal immigrants, the New York Times is quick to raise concerns. But certain correct causes and personalities not only get a pass but receive heroic treatment. A prime example is comedian-activist Jon Stewart, host of “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central and main news source for many young liberal hipsters. Stewart is celebrated once again by the Times, this time on the front of the Monday Business section by media reporters David Carr and Brian Stelter, for his latest crusade, a push to fund the health care of 9-11 responders who became ill. The online headline “ In ‘Daily Show’ Role on 9/11 Bill, Echoes of Murrow .” A comparison to Murrow, the vaunted journalist slayer of Sen. Joe McCarthy, is a deep compliment in liberal media circles. Did the bill pledging federal funds for the health care of 9/11 responders become law in the waning hours of the 111th Congress only because a comedian took it up as a personal cause? And does that make that comedian, Jon Stewart — despite all his protestations that what he does has nothing to do with journalism — the modern-day equivalent of Edward R. Murrow? read more
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