- Location
- Chattanooga
I really didn't want to start another thread about this but I could no longer edit the title to show the video has finally been added. Well two so far. Here's what the delay was all about.
My camcorder stopped connecting to my computer. I bought another and it had a .MOV format and my Quicktime wouldn't play it correctly, much less edit it. So, I downloaded the latest version (dial-up) and it wouldn't play it correctly.
Then I realized the problem was my computer - it was too slow, didn't have enough memory, and didn't have enough memory on the display card. I called my buddy; took him my computer one Saturday morning and got it back the next afternoon complete with 3.2 MHz, 1 Gig of RAM, and 256M bytes on the display board. So now I can play the vids but I can't edit the .MOV format, nor reliably convert it to a different format, sooo, I buy QuickTime Pro ($30) and wait 5 days for it to arrive in the mail, finally to realize the 'pro' part was in what I had already downloaded and all I had to do was activate it with the registration number. I could have done that five days ago.
Got the videos edited and tried to upload to YouTube; it was going to take an hour and 45 minutes, oh well, that's ok. But after five attempts and being cut off each time, I decided it was time to leave Juno and go with the local phone company. So I set up dial-up with them, and start another download. It was gonna take 2 hours and 15 min, failed for "unknown causes" in about an hour or so.
Then my wife put an ad in the classifieds and I couldn't keep the phone tied up with long uploads - not that I could upload on dialup anyway. So finally, I bit the bullet and upgraded to DSL; it took ten and a half minutes to upload the video and it worked the first time.
Anyway, enough whinning and venting here's one of two videos:
This one is just a speedline drop - bear in mind that not only is it operating through four pulleys, I'm also feeding rope through a 3WP and it's still moves right on down the line:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cP0IVZXr0uY
In this one, I move the log down the speedline a short distance and then let it straight down:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkGilW0IBzw
Normally, I'd be doing the control, etc. in the tree, but I had to operate the camcorders and the log, so I just extended everything down to the ground, but I would have used the same setup in the tree.
Ahh what the heck - one more:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEoUCBI4X8A
My camcorder stopped connecting to my computer. I bought another and it had a .MOV format and my Quicktime wouldn't play it correctly, much less edit it. So, I downloaded the latest version (dial-up) and it wouldn't play it correctly.
Then I realized the problem was my computer - it was too slow, didn't have enough memory, and didn't have enough memory on the display card. I called my buddy; took him my computer one Saturday morning and got it back the next afternoon complete with 3.2 MHz, 1 Gig of RAM, and 256M bytes on the display board. So now I can play the vids but I can't edit the .MOV format, nor reliably convert it to a different format, sooo, I buy QuickTime Pro ($30) and wait 5 days for it to arrive in the mail, finally to realize the 'pro' part was in what I had already downloaded and all I had to do was activate it with the registration number. I could have done that five days ago.
Got the videos edited and tried to upload to YouTube; it was going to take an hour and 45 minutes, oh well, that's ok. But after five attempts and being cut off each time, I decided it was time to leave Juno and go with the local phone company. So I set up dial-up with them, and start another download. It was gonna take 2 hours and 15 min, failed for "unknown causes" in about an hour or so.
Then my wife put an ad in the classifieds and I couldn't keep the phone tied up with long uploads - not that I could upload on dialup anyway. So finally, I bit the bullet and upgraded to DSL; it took ten and a half minutes to upload the video and it worked the first time.
Anyway, enough whinning and venting here's one of two videos:
This one is just a speedline drop - bear in mind that not only is it operating through four pulleys, I'm also feeding rope through a 3WP and it's still moves right on down the line:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cP0IVZXr0uY
In this one, I move the log down the speedline a short distance and then let it straight down:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkGilW0IBzw
Normally, I'd be doing the control, etc. in the tree, but I had to operate the camcorders and the log, so I just extended everything down to the ground, but I would have used the same setup in the tree.
Ahh what the heck - one more:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEoUCBI4X8A