IBC2015 Daily D3 Sunday 13 September

Page 62

62

For the latest show news and updates follow

#IBCShow

Camcorder and D-SLR market in saturation mode By Douglas I. Sheer

It used to be that what you were shooting determined what capture tool was appropriate. Cameras came in three flavors: studio, field (essentially a studio camera that could record and go outdoors) and camcorder. That was all we knew until Digital Single Lens still cameras came along that could capture video. They changed the game. The market was put into upheaval and by the arrival a few decades ago of the D-SLR. It was Eastman Kodak who introduced the first D-SLR in 1991, but since then it has been largely a Canon market that Nikon has also done quite well in. Those cameras that were able to bridge stills and video in one body overcame preferences for camcorders and dominated the last decade. For a considerable time D-SLRs seemed to be capturing everybody interested in portable shooting. Now, that domination has slowed substantially, according to the latest report from DIS Consulting Corporation called Professional Camcorders World 2015, published in July. The study, covers seven market segments, worldwide, and was based on 1525 enduser responses. The segments included: broadcast/cable, production/post, mobile/OB, event video, independent video, institutional and rental house.

A glut of camcorders and D-SLRs had flooded the market in the past few years and we have now arrived at a highly saturated market where, despite very low prices, end-users are loathe to replace them just yet. There are pockets of growth, but overall, things have slowed. In the past few years, camcorders have had to become more competitive and they had to become less expensive to hold their own against D-SLRs and the attractiveness of digital cinematography cameras as they offered an easy transition to 4K (or other versions of UHD). This has been happening and companies like JVC, Panasonic, Canon, Sony, Ikegami and Blackmagic have all offered inexpensive camcorder solutions for everything from news to general programme production. Blackmagic calls everything they make a camera, but several models incorporate SD or other memory card recording options in situ, which for all intents and purposes means ‘camcorder.’ D-SLRs are being strongly challenged by mirror-less models and by one main provider, Sony, whose A7 series has attracted a lot of attention and a growing market share. Yes, there are other mirror-less brands, such as Olympus, but for video, Sony has dominated and enhanced their share through marketing

their own complimentary line of lenses. But, as nature abhors a vacuum, we expect to see the Canon and Nikon series of mirror-less systems (both introduced earlier this year) to help them avoid being further threatened by Sony. Both are D-SLR-like. But, we shouldn’t count D-SLRs out. This year, the 4K versions of D-SLRs are gaining share and that could help sustain them, especially among diehard D-SLR fans, and there are many of them. Cameras and camcorders are becoming almost

interchangeable today, as they both tend to permit recording with solid state media, something that had been the exclusive territory of camcorders in the past. D-SLRs, of course, record to the media as well. The popularity of flash media is also central to the popularity of all these field-centric capture devices. Flash media use – ranging from SD cards to P2 and SXS as well as other specialised packaging – is found to be in almost every corner of the industry and it gets utilised at stages of post production workflows.

And, the numbers are huge. Whether in use in cameras, camcorders or D-SLRs during capture, or later in the workflow, flash has become the dominant media in field recording and temporary storage, before laying off to hard drives.

Douglas I. Sheer is CEO and chief analyst of DIS Consulting Corporation located in Woodstock, New York. He may be reached at dougsheer@gmail.com

All the Elements: iPro lenses on an iPhone 6 and 6 Plus

iPro Lenses for iPhone 6 Schneider Optics By David Fox

The iPro lens system for smartphones is now compatible with Apple’s iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, thanks to new cases made by Element Case. The new case has a rugged bayonet stainless steel mount to attach any of the iPro lenses

62 IBC D3 2015 Issue v1MDL.indd 1

and offers a leather texture surface for a soft grip feel similar to that of SLR cameras, plus a pair of 1/4-20 taps for attachment to a tripod or other camera support. Buttons on the case allow the iPhone to be powered on and off, volume to be increased or decreased, and the camera shutter to be activated. iPro lenses are built to the same standards as Schneider

Optics’ professional lines of still and cinematography lenses and provide users with Super Wide, Wide Angle, Fisheye, Telephoto and Macro lenses, which are quickly mounted via the bayonet mount on the case. Don Shafer, director, sales and marketing, photo/video, Schneider Optics, said, “The new custom-made Element cases for the iPhone6/6 Plus fit the tight

tolerances the iPro Lens system requires, while also providing the incredible level of protection

for which their cases are known.” 11.A41

26/08/2015 23:16


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.