Video Making - Mobile World Congress Barcelona
The GSMA Mobile World Congress (MWC) is the World’s largest exhibition for the mobile phone industry that takes place every year in February, or sometimes in March, in Barcelona, Spain.
where you read stuff about filmmaking
The GSMA Mobile World Congress (MWC) is the World’s largest exhibition for the mobile phone industry that takes place every year in February, or sometimes in March, in Barcelona, Spain.
A while ago I was reading and interview of Peter Hurley, an amazing headshot photographer from New York. Beside taking client pictures, making DVD courses and doing on-site shootings, Peter mentioned that he forces...
Spain is one of best and most popular filming location in the World. In the 1960s, directors of the size of Sergio Leone did help Spain to become a popular destination for movie producers and...
Developing and bringing a new product into an crowded marketplace is a hard task. Unlike large corporations, small companies and start-ups can dedicated smaller budgets for marketing and advertisement. Video content is the most direct...
Noam Kroll is a very talented film maker from Los Angeles, USA. Noam is as well a guy who likes cameras from the Australian Camera manufacturer Blackmagic Design and recently he put together a cute...
The French company Ubisoft Entertainment SA is a 3 billion Euros company dedicated to the development of videogames. In October 2015 Ubisoft released their new Assassin’s Creed videogame named Assassin’s Creed Syndicate. As expected, the...
This year at NAB Show 2016 tons of new cameras, lenses and other filmmaking stuff got presented. An important and quite interesting piece equipment that NAB 2016 was not the revealing place for is...
I first heard about Digital Bolex in the far 2012 when the Los Angeles CEO of Polite in Public, Joseph Rubinstein, successfully attempted a Kickstarter campaign to build his own side project, The Cinema D16...
A lot can be said about Kodak and its bold move to build and sell a digital camera that is actually… analogic.