Tag: video

2009.11.09 09:40:04

Ubisoft have released the first in a trilogy of short films to accompany the release of Assassin's Creed 2, which they hope will be one of the biggest games of the coming months. Their studios are based in Montreal, and they aim to use this facility to produce more visual content based on their IP, such as the Assassin's Creed and Tom Clancy game series.

Here is the first film; Assassin's Creed: Lineage.

 



2009.08.21 11:48:50

Magazines

The first-ever video advertisement will be published in a traditional paper magazine in September.

The video-in-print ads will appear in select copies of the US show business title Entertainment Weekly. The slim-line screens - around the size of a mobile phone display - also have rechargeable batteries. The chip technology used to store the video - described as similar to that used in singing greeting cards - is activated when the page is turned. Each chip can hold up to 40 minutes of video. The first clips will preview programmes from US TV network CBS and show adverts by the drinks company Pepsi. They will appear in 18 September editions of the magazine distributed in Los Angeles and New York.

VIDEO TECHNOLOGY

Screen uses liquid crystal display (LCD) technology

Each is 2.7mm thick with 320x240 resolution

Can store 40mins of video

Battery can be recharged via mini-USB

Rechargeable battery lasts up to 70 mins

Developed by LA-firm Americhip

It's believed the new technology will cost much more than normal print ads. However, BBC correspondent Rajesh Mirchandani said that in an increasingly competitive market, advertisers have realised that it is more important than ever to create attention for their product. He likened the technology to the Daily Prophet - a newspaper with moving pictures described in the Harry Potter books.

It is not the first time that publishers have experimented with digital technology in magazines. Last year, for example, men's lifestyle magazine Esquire published the first using e-ink technology, with a cover that flashed in alternating patterns. E-ink is the technology used in the Sony Reader and Amazon Kindle electronic books. Americhip, the developer of video-in-print, has also created magazine technology that appeals to various senses, including smell.

 


Tags: print | video