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The only constant is change

Chris Jackson | 15:15 UK time, Thursday, 5 May 2011

I remember my amazement the first time I was given an office mobile phone for a foreign trip. It was so big a modern budget airline would have refused it as hand baggage. It weighed a ton.

However there I was on a Swiss mountainside when it rang and the office were asking how my filming was going.

How on earth had it tracked me down to the middle of nowhere and a foreign nowhere at that? Tell kids today and they'll laugh.

I fear we are about to enter a similar brave new world in TV technology. We are going .

There is something very reassuring about ejecting a tape and placing it on your dedicated office shelf. You can glance at it knowing a hard day's slog has been captured and it will be there when you come to edit the film.

Our gang with the Yorkshire Air Ambulance at Leeds Bradford Airport
This week we visited the production office of .

Former Inside Out colleagues from Yorkshire had split off to produce the popular series from a hanger at .

They follow the daily lives of the air ambulance.

Video journalists use the lightest possible cameras, but everything they shoot ends up on tiny little disks hardly bigger than a builder's thumb nail.

It's the next generation of TV technology and it's heading our way. I'm in a bit of denial as all I see is 101 ways to lose your material.

Here are just a few:


  • Accidentally dropped into a cup of boiling tea

  • Left in a "safe" place and forgotten

  • Placed in a jeans pocket and put through the washing machine

My cutting edge colleagues assure me if you are disciplined all will be well. But once you download it onto a computer we all know the perils that await.

Who hasn't pressed delete and regretted it? ....tried to open a file and found it has corrupted in some way? .... had a computer crash and take all contents with it?

Old record player

Bring back old technology!

I'm no , but with everything being miniaturised and digitised we all sign up to a blind trust in technology that we as individuals have no way of controlling.

When an old car broke down, I could open the bonnet and have a fair chance of making it go again. These days it's all electronics and a garage is the only solution.

I welcome the higher quality and lower cost that newer technology brings. I just wish it was more tactile and failsafe.

In my loft I have vinyl records, reel to reel tape and the odd VHS cassette, but nothing to play any of them on. Old habits die hard in a world of constant change.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    There is some resonance in your comments in that the gap between those who can build and understand a technology and the end user is grower ever larger. However, as someone who did get some vinyl records and old audio and video cassette tapes out of the loft a few years ago (and actually did still have some equipment to play them with) I was appalled at the quality that resulted. Stretched tape, scratched records and cracked cassettes abounded. How much better the ability to create unlimited flawless copies, the ease of transfer and the improvement in quality.

    Besides, in your posting title you missed the latter part of that comment; "The wise adapt." ;-)

  • Comment number 2.

    Nicely put Natman. You're absolutely right - PS I am an early adopter of most techy gadgets etc so my blog was a little tongue in cheek!

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