
Workstation Hardware
DIT workstations are typically custom built. They need to be fast in every meaning of the word. This lesson explores the hardware choices for constructing a workstation.Workstation Hardware
Developed by Robert Trim, Intro To The Digital Imaging Technician CourseABOUT THIS LESSON
This lesson focuses on Mac computers, still an industry standard, as well as hardware and software involved. Should you buy the expensive cards or will the workflow require something mid range. Completely breaking downand exploring the technology from A - Z.
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
- Financial considerations to get the job done
- Breaking down all components of the work station (Motherboards, Cards, Monitors, the works)
- How on-set decisions dictate components of the work station
- Understanding the technology lingo
ABOUT THE LESSON AUTHOR
Robert Trim
Instructor, FilmSkills Salt Lake, UtahRobert Trim has spent more than 30 years in a wide variety of the film and video production industry. With his first fascination being the still image, Robert put himself through college photographing models portfolios, corporate brochures and annual reports, product photography and lots of painful weddings and baby portraits.
Then the moving image caught his eye. 16mm film became a passion. The frames whirred, the labs processed and late nights were spent hunched over editing benches with the ever-so-lovely smell of splicing glue. This gave way to the new media--videotape. Immediate gratification. Shoot it and see it right away. Albeit black and white, using really bulky gear and not so portable cameras. Never mind. It was cool.
After the undergraduate degree in Communications (film production with marketing minor), Robert worked in the industry for 20 years. As creative director for a regional advertising agency serving 400 Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise stores, and more auto dealers than one could shake a stick at. And of course the odd clothing store or real-estate development marketing firms. Along the way, he garnered several regional and national advertising awards and added 300 TV and radio commercials to his portfolio.
During his 8-year stint in the broadcast News business, he edited and produced his way to 11 Regional News Emmy awards working for networks and network affiliates.
Robert delved deeply into corporate and educational media production, producing more than 400 program-hours of educational telecourses, corporate promotional, and product videos while running a production facility for 15 years.
Along the way, he found a few hours to help raise a family and finish a Masters Degree in business administration.
Robert’s a retired Associate Professor of Digital Media at Utah Valley University located in Orem, Utah, just south of Salt Lake City. He’s a Fulbright Specialist, an AVID Certified Instructor for Media Composer and AVID Symphony software, and ((RADAR)) DIT certified, and DaVinci Resolve certified trainer. He teaches these and color correction in addition to his first love—cinematography world wide.