Adrian,
There's a long tail to the video with no video and
blank audio. After a
while, a section of audio from the main flow is repeated.
Thanks, yeah that was a left over to compare an alternate ending. One
idea is to make it such that the video can "loop" seamlessly for continuous
play, at say a museum. And the plan is to put it under Creative Commons
since I'm told that's the best way to help ensure it can be re-used without
question.
The plan was to keep it to 10min - at one point we had it up to 30min!!
Minus the inadvertent excess, it'll be exactly 15min. A part2 might focus
more on the Z80 and 6502 lines themselves, or I was thinking a kind of bio
on the actual engineers involved ("the names and faces").
Canada is represented also :) And I just recalled, the "TK-80" (training
kit Z80 board) is also a "made in Japan" item (and led to the PC-8001 in
'79), it probably needs a flag (and I wanted to show a France flag for the
Micral-N -- but in the effort to keep it closer to 10min, we just couldn't
cover every item to keep a reasonable tempo). So then we debated to not
have popup flags at all, but I felt it was important to note that there was
international involvement here.
-Steve
On Wed, Mar 8, 2023 at 5:55 AM Adrian Godwin via cctalk <
cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
> Not really technical, but a couple of presentation points :
>
There's a long tail to the video with no video and
blank audio. After a
while, a section of audio from the main flow is repeated.
>
> It seems to be common to consider Youtube videos more approachable if
> they're up to about 10 minutes long. You might benefit by splitting it into
> 2 parts.
>
> And even further off topic .. I see that the pictorial guide includes
> machines from GB and Japan (and I think a Sharp is mentioned in the
> description). Although GB was heavily influenced by USA machines it did
> have it's own distinct history and so, I think, did Japan. Russia also had
> clones of well known machines and their own designs. Did any other
> countries have a history that was more complex than picking the best known
> parts of the international trade ?
>
>
>
> On Wed, Mar 8, 2023 at 11:24 AM Steve Lewis via cctalk <
> cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> > Greetings,
> >
> > We're making final touches on a short history-video we've been making
> about
> > home computers (my daughter, in middle school, has been helping).
> >
> > If anyone has time/interest to do a review, the draft listing is here:
> >
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z9mgSVJZoFc
> >
> > Unless anyone spots a gross technical error, we're hoping to render the
> > final sometime this weekend or sometime this month.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Steve
> >
>