mrcallow said:
Here is how I see the DVD at first blush.
There are 12000 members and how many will buy a DVD? There are 12000 members and how many came?
If participation in both can be assumed to be equal that would be 100 DVDs sold. At @ 50 each that is 5k and would cover rentals (sound equipment, lights and Cameras) with maybe enough left over to hire 6 - 8 AV students to do the recording (2 camera operators and 2 sound guys and a couple of grips and lighting folk). It can not be done with any assurance of even minimal quality with a home DV camera and on camera sound and our volunteers would be needed for the main event.
Additionally the post production editing and menu creation would be intensive and it would need to be done on a volunteer basis. This is not a job for Shareware or the DVD software that came with your burner.
We might need to get waivers from the attendees and at this price the instructors would need to give up their workshops for free.
As mentioned some workshops would not benefit from a video recording and others (like street photography) might be ruined by the intrusion.
I would think the DVD would need to be at least $100 per if anticipated sales were to be 100 units. This way we would be able to pay for the unforeseen and give the instructors payment. This might allow for the post production person to get a small check as well.
We could possibly sell the DVD for 50.00 If we could be assured of selling more than 100, say twice that, and if we have no qualms about asking the post production person to work for free.
I agree. To make a conference video, you need a crew dedicated to that. However, it can be made with the high-end consumer video cameras (3CCD on mini DV) with a non-linear video editing system like Final Cut Pro (or AVID) that I'm sure some students would love to get involved.
I remember a couple of graduate students doing that kind of work for their department of... well, not photography or film but anthroplogy back in college. It's a matter of how to get get the locals involved and rent their equipment at the minimum cost. The quality may suffer a bit, but can be done.
Or if the aim is to make video of a workshop like a typical "how-to" instructional video, that goes up in the scale of labor and cost. It's easier to hire some production company with an industrial package. This is necessary to be able to sell the finished product on DVD copies or charge for vewing the video streaming.
Maybe for an online option, ask the viewers to pay for additional annual fee or pure donation to APUG. Something that they don't have to pay each time they open the video file.
If the recording of the workshop is problematic, then do it on some other occasion but still make it available through APUG. Basically whoever wants to give a lecture on DVD or online, they can, if they can agree on the contract and all the techinical issues are solved.
This goes beyond the conference video but will benefit many of us as members/subscribers and generate profit for the instructor(s) and the site owner/Sean. Just don't let the students or any volunteers overwork and kill themselves in the process!
