Archive for Business

Résumé’s up.

So we’re trying to figure out what we’re doing next and where we’re going to live in the new year. I’ve put up my résumé for public consumption. Feel free to mail me any late-breaking job offers. Or typo corrections.

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Scanner beauty shot

Thanks to Chris, the builder of stuff, who prepared this rendering of the scanner for me:

Midwest Telecine film scanner prototype

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Going to Anchorage

Well, I’m gonna be going to the Amia conference in Anchorage, Alaska next week.

I want to take my second prototype film scanner to show it in at a vendor booth. One problem: I don’t have one yet! All the parts should arrive this week. So I’ll be working day and night to get it together.

I’m excited about the new design. The ripple in the last test film is caused by two things: First, the brush-DC motors I was using had some “cogging” as the motor turned. This was preventing the film from moving smoothly through the transport. Secondly, the displacement sensor I was using (the carcass of an optical mouse), which *should* have canceled out the motion, has a lowly 300 dpi resolution. I made a PLL to translate this signal up to the line clock for the camera, but the sensor resolution limited the accuracy of the line clock.

After some interesting but ugly work with a stepper motor (too many moving parts), I switched to a high-torque pancake motor directly driving the spindles. Much better. This motor has no cogging that I can feel, and turns very smoothly. If this was a money-no-object design, I would use e-TORQ motors. But, remembering the 80/20 rule, I found a Chinese manufacturer of decent pancake motors intended for electric bicycle use. I designed a current-mode controller for them. I’ll have to limit their maximum speed: They can really whip a reel of film around! Maybe this can be a feature: rewind 800 feet of film in twenty seconds!

I’m also going to replace the 300 dpi sensor with a new 1600 dpi sensor (sacrificed from a Razer mouse). This should give a good, stable image. Thanks to HP/Agilent/Avago for putting their excellent datasheets online.

It’s exciting to see something come together after working for almost a year on it.

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qcad scaling patch.

I was designing something using qcad and needed to scale an object in one dimension only, to draw in perspective.  So I made a patch to qcad that looks for two comma-separated arguments in the rescaling dialog.   If it sees two arguments, it will take the first as the x-dimension scaling and the second as the y-dimension scaling.
Also, I made a trivial patch to allow qcad to compile on a 64-bit platform.

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First film scan result

Scrambling to find a vowel

In my business, I’ve been trying to design a low-cost, archival film scanner.  I’ve been working out of my garage.  Today I got a piece of film scanned for the first time.  It’s really rough!
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Good customer service experience.

Today I got some circuit boards back from Advanced Circuits (aka 4pcb). They packed some freebies in the box: A packet of microwave popcorn, and a clock-thermometer-desktop organizer gadget, which didn’t work. I hope it’s not a PCB failure. Advanced Circuits has crazy marketing. They’ll give new cutomers $500 of merchandise free. Too bad I’m not a new customer.

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My New Business

Well, I’m now a week into my new business. So far, it has involved a lot of paper work. Here’s my logo. Maybe when the money starts rolling in, I can hire a real graphic artist.

Midwest Telecine logo

When the DNS propogates, you’ll be able to click the image and go to my website. Not that there’s anything there yet.

I am trying to design a film scanner for small-gauge film. I will not say any more, because talking is easier than doing, and I hate vaporware.

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