Tag Archives: Jonathan Moser

Pro Version Astra2

Review: Logickeyboard Avid Media Composer – Pro Version Astra2

By Jonathan Moser

I have a confession, one that could get me thrown out of the editor’s union (if I still belonged to it). I’m embarrassed to say it… totally ashamed… but here goes: I love color-coded and mapped keyboards! There, I said it, and I feel better for it.

I’ve been editing a very long time, using CMX, Grass Valley, ISC, Calloway and others, all the way to Avid Media Composer.  I know, I know… you younger editors laugh in the face of these keyboards. Many of you love your plain-vanilla, sometimes even blank keyboards. You don’t need graphics on your keys because your muscle memory lands you right on the correct key every time. But I’m older. My memory has no muscles left… and I like the bright colors and symbols. They help cue my fingers where to go and find the right command, and my brain doesn’t have to work so hard. That’s why Logickeyboard products have always been my go-to. I’m happy to say the company has a new offering, and it’s great.

Remember all those buried shortcuts in Media Composer that could take you to secret places in your editing system that you might not have known even existed? (Things like creation settings or your calculator or timeline settings with a press of your control or shift key, no mousing around?) Well, while most keyboards let you see these hidden shortcuts on their keys, usually it was just one level deep. This new Pro version  lets you see three levels deep, getting you to workflow heaven with faster speed in fewer steps.

Besides the solid keystroke action of the Logickeyboard brand and the bright, backlit keys with their vivid colors (fun fact: Logickeyboard was the first to bring back the Liftman icon after years of his mysterious disappearance.), the keyboard follows standard Avid keyboard shortcut architecture and displays these hidden shortcuts in a vibrant and eye-catching way. The keys’ graphics are split, clearly displaying what the shortcut is. One half of the key’s display is the standard alphanumeric letter and overall key function (mark in, mark out, place marker, insert, etc.) as on most of today’s keyboards, but the upper half of the key shows you where the shift, control and alt key functions to the shortcuts go. They do this with colored dots (purple, violet, red and blue) indicating what function they perform. Sound confusing? It’s really not, and it becomes intuitive quickly.

Pro Version Astra2I’ve been on the keyboard for a while and have discovered this arrangement does indeed speed me up — maybe not by light speed, but enough to make the workflow go a bit smoother. And since I was never a big shortcut guy in the first place, I’ve learned over the past few weeks to indeed become more efficient, finding those speedy secrets that stop all the mousing I’m used to doing. I’m sure younger, less stodgy editors will have a field day with this keyboard.

I don’t really know the effect the keyboard will have on us kinda-stuck-in-our-ways editors, but I imagine for those rookies brave enough to start on Media Composer, it can really ease their learning curve and allow them to rely on memory and use the visual cues this gives them.

You can see over 135 shortcuts on these keys, up from 62 in the previous iterations of Logickeyboard’s product line — a 135% increase.

The solid feel of the keyboard, with its quiet push action, has great tactile feedback and smooth travel without requiring a lot of effort, and the sculptured keys make touch location precise and easy.  The keyboard’s durable scissor switch mechanism will provide a lifetime of durability (my Logickeyboard has lasted over five years so far). The mechanism has been beefed up from the previous Astra builds.

In addition, there is now a more robust USB 3 SuperSpeed port offering enough power to drive peripherals like SSD drives or keyboard lights and other accessories. The impressive, heavy-duty, color-coded (and long) cabling from the keyboard (which ends in two USB A connectors — one to power the keyboard and lighting and the second to power the previously mentioned USB 3.0 port) is durable and can weather a lot of abuse. You can actuate five levels of brightness with the press of a button on the numeric keypad, which can also control audio volume.

As for keyboard height and angle, the Pro is the same as the previous Astra2. It has a fixed, low-profile design at an 8-degree tilt.

Pro Version Astra2Final Thoughts
Is it worth upgrading your older keyboard to the Pro? If you’re a seasoned veteran, perhaps. It’s an attractive replacement if it’s time to update. If you’re an editor who wants to up your performance level, take in new methodology and speed up your game and your workflow, it’s definitely worth it.

Logickeyboard has taken a lot of time to create something both highly functional and attractive — a lot of thought went into efficiency and the needs of editors. It’s a beautiful and ultimately useful addition to an editor’s toolkit, especially with the lights out.

Summary of Highlights:

    • New split key design offers 135 shortcuts, up from the original 62.
    • Shortcuts are Avid default; no remapping needed.
    • Color-coded modifiers delineate easily defined shortcuts in an innovative, easily readable dot legend.
    • Strong build using the time-tested Astra2 keyboard assembly.
    • Powerful USB 3 port can handle SSDs, webcams, most any peripheral.
    • Dimensions 17.6” X 6.0” X 1.2,” weight 2.1lbs
    • Available for both PC and Mac.
    • MSRP $149.90

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Jonathan Moser is a six-time Emmy winning editor/producer working in NY. He can be reached for work at flashcutter@gmail.com. His website is www.remoteediting.tv.

Logickeyboard’s Astra 2

Review: Logickeyboard’s Astra 2 Backlit Editing Keyboard

By Jonathan Moser

Five years ago, I had the opportunity to try out Logickeyboard’s Astra backlit editing keyboard. While there are other backlits on the market, this one impressed me with its solid build, keystroke actions and cool look. Now Logickeyboard has come out with the next-generation Astra 2. It’s the same sleek and colorful workhorse in many ways, but it is also quite different thanks to a few significant new features.

Logickeyboard’s Astra 2The keyboard is rugged, and at 2.1lbs., it’s solid. With an 8-degree angle it’s also typing-friendly. The ability to work in darkened edit rooms with a backlit keyboard cannot be understated. Seeing the monitor without extraneous light is a huge plus for color correction and general workflows where you need reliable colorimetry. The keyboard’s five levels of brightness allow you to work as comfortably as you want.

Changes Under the Hood
The cosmetic differences are plenty — new bolder iconography on the keys updates the overall look of the keyboard. You’ll find other improvements as well: The function lights are larger and brighter and now include a scroll lock light in addition to the standard numbers lock and caps lock lights.

The function keys are now full-sized, making them easier to access. There are four new keys above the numerical keypad for multimedia functions and key brightness.

One difference I have mixed feelings about is that instead of two USB 2 ports built into the back of the board on the Astra, there is now one USB 3 port on the Astra 2. The company told me that USB 3 is trickier, and after several attempts to use two ports, the gain of a single faster USB 3 port was considered a good trade-off.

With USB 3 being 10x faster that USB 2, the ability to tie in other peripherals, such as external hard drives or other peripherals, makes this trade-off more than robust. It adds greater capabilites to what would have just been a keyboard. It took more than a year for Logickeyboards to work out the kinks of the USB transport, and it’s a welcome addition.

Mechanical Upgrades
The keystroke mechanism was reworked entirely, with improved scissor-switch action with each key made for 10,000,000 keystrokes (probably enough to get us through a few edit sessions, I think.) The tactile feedback is solid, with a satisfying and solid “thunk” feel.

Logickeyboard’s Astra 2Also beefed up are the two USB cable connectors: 1.8 meters long. Twice as thick as the previous version, the cabling is much more robust. There are two USB connectors to the CPU — the thicker one carries the USB 3 dataline. The smaller cable is the lighting power and keyboard dataline.

Compatibility
The Astra 2 supports Avid’s Media Composer and Pro Tools; Adobe’s Premiere, After Effects and Photoshop; Maxon Cinema 4D; Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve; and more.

Final Thoughts
Logickeyboard has reworked the overall build from the ground up, creating a good-looking and sleek (and dare I say it, sexy?) addition to any edit, photo or audio suite.

Logickeyboards is also producing multiple customized Astra 2’s for other companies… but I’ll be happy to stick with my Avid Astra 2. It’s fabulous.

The Astra 2 is available for Mac and PC and costs $149.90.


Jonathan Moser is an editor/producer out of NYC. He can be reached at flashcutter@yahoo.com and is open for business. Follow him on Twitter @flashcut100.

A Sneak Peek: Avid shows its next-gen Media Composer

By Jonathan Moser

On the weekend of NAB and during Avid Connect, I found myself sitting in a large meeting room with some of the most well-known editors and creatives in the business. To my left was Larry Jordan, Steve Audette was across from me, Chris Bovè and Norman Hollyn to my right, and many other luminaries of the post world filled the room. Motion picture, documentary, boutique, commercial and public broadcasting masters were all represented here… as well as sound designers and producers. It was quite humbling for me.

We’d all been asked to an invite-only meeting with the leading product designers and engineers from Avid Technology to see the future of Media Composer… and to do the second thing we editors do best: bitch. We were asked to be as tough, critical and vocal as we could about what we’re about to see. We were asked to give them a thumbs up or thumbs down on their vision and execution of the next generation of Media Composer as they showed us long-needed overhauls and redesigns.

Editors Chris Bové and Avid’s Randy Martens getting ready for the unveil.

What we were shown is the future of the Media Composer, and based on what I saw, its future is bright. You think you’ve heard that before? Maybe, but this time is different. This is not vaporware, smoke and mirrors or empty promises… I assure you, this is the future.

The Avid team, including new Avid CEO Jeff Rosica, was noticeably open and attentive to the assembled audience of seasoned professionals invited to Avid Connect… a far cry from the halcyon days of the ‘90s and 2000s when Media Composer ruled the roost, and sat complacently on its haunches. Too recently, the Avid corporate culture was viewed by many in the post community as arrogant and tone deaf to its users’ criticisms and requests. This meeting was a far cry from that.

What we were shown was a redefined, reenergized and proactive attitude from Avid. Big corporations aren’t ordinarily so open about such big changes, but this one directly addressed decades of users’ concerns and suggestions.

By the way, this presentation was separate from the new NAB announcements of tiered pricing, new feature rollouts and enhanced interoperability for Media Composer. Avid invited us here not for approval, but for appraisal… for our expertise and feedback and to help steer them in the right direction.

As a life-long Avid user who has often questioned the direction of where the company was headed, I need to say this once more: this time is different.

These are real operational changes that we got to see in an open, informed — and often questioned and critiqued — environment. We editors are a tough crowd, but team Avid was ready, listening, considering and feeding back new ideas. It was an amazingly open and frank give and take from a company that once was shut off from such possibilities.

In her preliminary introduction, Kate Ketcham, manager of Media Composer product management, gave the assembled audience a pretty brutal and honest assessment of Media Composer’s past (and oft repeated) failings and weaknesses —a task usually reserved for us editors to tell Avid, but this time it was Avid telling us what we already knew and they had come to realize. Pretty amazing.

The scope of her critique showed us that, despite popular opinion, Avid HAS been listening to us all along: they got it. They acknowledged the problems, warts and all, and based on the two-hour presentation shown through screenshots and demos, they’re intent on correcting their mistakes and are actively doing so.

Addressing User Concerns
Before the main innovations were shared, there was an initial concern from the editors that Avid be careful not to “throw out the baby with the bathwater” in its reinvention. Media Composer’s primary strength — as well as one of its most recognized weaknesses among newer editors — has been its consistency of look and feel, as well as its logical operational methodology and dependable media file structural organization. Much was made of one competitor’s historical failure to keep consistency and integrity of the basic and established editing paradigms (such as two-screen layout, track-based editing, reasonably established file structure, etc.) in a new release.

We older editors depend on a certain consistency. Don’t abandon the tried and true, but still “get us into this century” was the refrain from the assembled. The Avid team addressed these concerns clearly and reassuringly — the best, familiar and most trusted elements of Media Composer would stay, but there will now be so much more under the hood. Enough to dynamically attract and compel newer users and adoptees.

The company has spent almost a year doing research, redesign and implementation; this is a true commitment, and they are pledging to do this right. Avid’s difficult and challenging task in reimagining Media Composer was to make the new iteration steadfast, efficient and dependable (something existing users expect), yet innovative, attractive, flexible, workflow-fluid and intuitive enough for the newer users who are used to more contemporary editing and software. It’s a slippery and problematic slope, but one the Avid team seemed to navigate with an understanding of the issues.

As this is still in the development stage, I can’t reveal particulars (I really wish I could because there were a ton), but I can give an overview of the types of implementation they’ve been developing. Also, this initial presentation deals only with one stage of the redesign of Media Composer — the user interface changes — with much more to come within the spectrum of change.

Rebuilding the Engine
I was assured by the Avid design team that most of the decades-old Media Composer code has been completely rewritten, updated and redesigned with current innovations and implementations similar to those of the competition. This is a fully realized redesign.

Flexibility and customization are integrated throughout. There are many UI innovations, tabbed bins, new views and newer and more efficient access to enhanced tools. Media Composer has entirely new windowing and organizational options that goes way beyond mere surface looks and feels, yet it is much different than the competition’s implementations. You can now customize the UI to incredible lengths. There are new ways of viewing and organizing media, source and clip information and new and intuitive (and graphical) ways of creating workspaces that get much more usable information to the editor than before.

The Avid team examined weaknesses of the existing Media Composer environment and workflow: clutter, too many choices onscreen at once; screens that resize mysteriously, which can throw concentration and creative flow off-base; looking at what causes oft-repeated actions and redundant keystrokes or operations that could be minimized or eliminated altogether; finding ways of changing how Media Composer handles screen real estate to let the editor see only what they need to see when they need it.

Gone are the windows covering other windows and other things that might slow users down. Avid showed us how attention was paid to making Media Composer more intuitive to new editors by shrinking the learning curve. The ability for more contextual help (without getting in the way of editing) has been addressed.

There are new uses of dynamic thumbnails, color for immediate recognition of active operations and window activation, different ways of changing modalities — literally changing how we looked at timelines, how we find media. You want tabbed bins? You want hover scrubbing? You want customization of workspaces done quickly and efficiently? Avid looked at what do we need to see and what we don’t. All of these things have been addressed and integrated. They have addressed the difficulties of handling effect layering, effect creation, visualization and effect management with sleek but understandable solutions. Copying complex multilayered effects will now be a breeze.

Everything we were shown answered long-tolerated problems we’ve had to accept. There were no gimmicks, no glitz, just honesty. There was method to the madness for every new feature, implementation and execution, but after feedback from us, many things were reconsidered or jettisoned. Interruptions from this critical audience were fast and furious: “Why did you do that?” “What about my workflow?” “Those palette choices don’t work for me.” “Why are those tools buried?” This was a synergy and free-flow of information between company and end-users unlike anything I’ve ever seen.

There was no defensiveness from Avid; they listened to each and every critique. I could see they were actively learning from us and that they understood the problems we were pointing out. They were taking notes, asking more questions and adding to their change lists. Editors made suggestions, and those suggestions were added and actively considered. They didn’t want blind acceptance. We were informing them, and it was really amazing to see.

Again, I wish I could be more specific about details and new implementations — all I can say is that they really have listened to the complaints and are addressing them. And there is much more in the works, from media ingest and compatibility to look and feel and overall user experience.

When Jeff Rosica stopped in to observe, talk and listen to the crowd, he explained that while Avid Technology has many irons in the fire, he believes that Media Composer (and Pro Tools) represent the heart of what the company is all about. In fact, since his tenure began, he has redeployed tremendous resources and financial investment to support and nurture this rebirth of Media Composer.

Rosica promised to make sure Avid would not repeat the mistakes made by others several years ago. He vowed to continue to listen to us and to keep what makes Media Composer the dependable powerhouse that it has been.

As the presentation wound down, a commitment was made by the Avid group to continue to elicit our feedback and keep us in the loop throughout all phases of the redevelopment.

In the end, this tough audience came away optimistic. Yeah, some were still skeptical, but others were elated, expectant and heartened. I know I was.

And I don’t drink Kool-Aid. I hate it in fact.

There is much more in development for MC at Avid in terms of AI integration, facial recognition, media ingest, export functionality and much more. This was just a taste of many more things to come, so stand by.

(Special thanks for access to Marianna Montague, David Colantuoni, Tim Claman, Randy Fayan, and Randy Martens of Avid Technology. If I’ve missed anyone, thank you and apologies.)


Jonathan Moser is a six-time Emmy winning freelance editor/producer based in New York. You can email him at flashcutter@yahoo.com.

NAB 2015: A veteran’s perspective

Where have all the buttons gone? They’ve gone to servers.

By Jonathan Moser

For me, NAB used to be about “the buttons.” The latest and the greatest. Which black box could do what to a picture… and sound. K-Scopes, ADO, A53, DDRs…switchers with a LOT of buttons and colors. Consoles, decks, 1-inch, all the Ds (D1,D2…D5). Cool hardware. But post hardware (with the exception of some, like NewTek’s TriCaster and a handful of others) has gotten decidedly boring. Let’s face it — hard drives and ASCII keyboards just aren’t sexy.

Now, NAB post production seems to be about everything else — servers, distribution, Ultra HD Continue reading

Jonathan Moser shares tips for Media Composer users

Long-time video editor Jonathan Moser, who has worked on such shows as Deadly Sins, American Gladiators, Dateline NBC and Making The Band, was recently kind enough to share some tips that he employs while cutting on Avid’s Media Composer. While also versed on Final Cut Pro, Moser calls Media Composer home.

1) When coloring clips in a bin for identifying, right/alt click on the color icon in the bin (which will open up the full range of the color palette rather than the measly 16 choices you get with the drop down Edit/Set Clip Color.)

2) I use an email folder called Avid to keep various iterations of clip formats with labels with all my tracks given specific names: ie: Audio 1 is NATSOT1, Audio 2 is NATSOT2, Video track 3 might Continue reading