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Panansonic IR interview - talks about GH2 hacker community
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  • No. Higher compression means the encoder ends up dropping more coefficients after the quantization stage. Fewer coefficients means there is less information that needs to go through the remaining stages of processing. (entropy coding, multiplexing, writing the bit stream). Lower compression means there is more information that needs to be processed. Processor load scales with the bit rate, not the compression level.

    Compression isn't like squeezing. It's transforming the video into a different representation, on which you can ignore the least important parts and keep the most important parts. The more you decide to keep, the more work that needs to be done in packaging and shipping of the things that you keep.

  • @balazer thanks for demystifying that one for me. much appreciated.

  • You can shoot in ISO 12,800 without hacking your camera.

  • Honestly, if the hack was actually loading the processor this would put more demand on the battery (hence more fucking current draw)... I see no difference in battery life whatsoever...

  • @EOSHD - "...if you are running the sensor in video mode at ISO 12,800, you are stressing the sensor. To say the hack doesn't touch the sensor isn't really accurate."

    And aside from an interview with a Panasonic marketing rep, your documented source for this authoritative claim is...?

  • if you are running the sensor in video mode at ISO 12,800, you are stressing the sensor.

    Can you please, tell me how ISO change stresses the sensor?

  • And of course more traffic over the buss generates more heat as well.

    I dunno about the GH2, but with the GH1 the extra heat generated while measurable is so nominal that it's pretty silly to speculate that it would effect the overall lifespan of the product under any kind of normal use. Then again if the environmental conditions were at the very edge of the actual operating limits (I dunno, like 120˚ in direct Sun?) then it might be enough of an extra push to crash the camera or something.

    No he's not. He's an employee for his own sake or maybe the sake of Panasonic and probably nothing to do with Christ. Chances are very good that many people here know more than he does about electronics. It might seem egotistical of me to say but I think I do myself - having a CS degree and having had designed many circuits in the past (for my own sake). :)

    "Credit" is earned IMO. And since we don't know what his past accomplishments are then all we have to go by is what he says. And what he said is fairly lame - even you have to admit. Right?

  • I think the reason we're all hacking our cameras is that we like to live on the edge. On the other hand, Panasonic's Darin Pepple comes across as precisely the cautious marketer of consumer products we've all known. When I worked at ABC radio, I wanted to set the Analog VU meters at as close to zero as I could - not at minus 3db, dammit! Later while running a TV studio, I disobeyed instructions and bypassed all the composite cabling and used Betacam component. And with the GH2, I'm the same guy. Ordinary risk management means Panasonic just have to find that sweet spot of quality vs reliability which Vitaliy speaks of - even if the benchmark is much lower than the product's capacity. Any way, we win.

  • Maybe a tiny bit of clarification would help out here?

    1) It's not a bad thing to be a "marketing guy" by any stretch. If honesty and integrity is maintained it can be really fun and rewarding! I don't see Panasonic often making bogus claims in marketing so I assume they do - or usually do.

    2) As a marketing guy, when faced with a semi-technical question such as:

    "So there has been a lot of interest in hacking GH2s. Might you take to heart some of those optimizations they're making when you're looking at future developments?"

    he should have stuck with the parts of his statement he actually knew to answer:

    "You know... Yes and no? We do take a look at what they do, and we take it very seriously, because obviously that's what the customer wants. ... ...as a consumer, go for it! But as a manufacturer, we have to stay within [OUR IMPLIED] limits..."

    instead of trying to wing it thereby not only making himself look a little silly but also misleading potential readers.

    3) To his credit he usually did keep to marketing type answers:

    DP: ...And it's interesting; you see a lot of people, who are basically hotwiring the camera, to push it even further.

    AE: Yeah, souping up the camera, the GH2: I was wanting to ask your perspective there.

    DP: It’s like a great car--you just want to soup it up and do even more with it.

    And later:

    DP: "We’re a cautious company, but we do take baby steps in those directions. This is an interesting point, though: You have the blogs and the websites and a lot of people creating these ideas and sharing their ideas out there. That's something that's available now to the consumer, to discuss these things amongst themselves. At the same time, we’re taking a look at it. We’re watching it, saying, ‘Okay, well, we need to start thinking about this. There’s a lot about it. It’s what the consumer wants. What can we do to make that a reality?’ At the same time, yes, there are going to be times where we just can’t go down that path; we have to let the consumer do what they want to do."

    etc.

    4) I just thought it was funny that his first grasp at an answer for that specific question was to /blame/ something other than "The Product" - even though AVCHD is as far as I know, a joint creation of Panasonic's and Olympus's.

    I really didn't mean to stir the pot quite so vigorously. :)

  • So in summary, for all we know, the hack may in fact reduce the camera's lifespan right?

  • No, the probability factor is like nil.

  • @brianluce In summary, based on our collective experience and independent technical analysis, there is neither reason nor evidence to support hypothetical speculations that modification of GH2 encoder firmware has any deleterious effect on the camera's hardware components.

  • MCUs and other ICs have a max temperature rating. In most commercial IC's this is 85C. The ICs have to work reliably to that temperature over their lifespan and the designers will have included a certain margin of safety even if there are heatsinks or heatspreaders used.

    There is no way a little bit of data increase will resort to overheating an IC to 85C..

  • Based on documented instances of your website's hyperbolic technical claims, is there any reason we should not consider your assertions those of an unfranchised marketing agent?

    As for documented sources for your hypothetical speculations, the clock is still ticking, but I doubt the pressure of interminable operation will reduce its life expectancy.

  • Everything has a lifetime, As long as you understand that ISO 12800 was a stock auto ISO setting (user manual pg 71). Vitaliy made it so we can manually have access to the higher ISO setting. This should not be in this conversation... Having said that, this thread is worthless....

    It's a $800 camera.. Vitaliy just made it better than some cameras 6X its cost. driftwood has given the GH2 a good rogering and I hear no complaints from him.

  • @LPowell Of course. And likewise there is no evidence to support hypothetical speculations that the hack has no detrimental long-term effect on the GH2. Though it doesn't stop me taking the risk...