The Synchromesh DDR is a turn-key upgrade from an HD VTR or DDR. It runs a show hardened Linux system, boots fast and plays Quicktime movies using a wide range of codecs, or records to a removable SATA hard disk
Synchromesh Turbine is our 'mini' solution. It's a small, rugged package, but plays out mildly compressed video with the quality and flexibility of it's older brother, the Synchromesh DDR. Turbine works on MeshNet, can play in sync with other units, and receives all it's commands from other units or MeshShift, or external control (TCP/IP).
Turbine offers the power of Synchromesh playback, with less footprint in your machine room - and wallet! Team it with DDRs or Octane to get the most power.
Synchromesh Octane turns an ordinary computer - or an extraordinary one, you choose - into am HD capable recording station. Record video, transcode and compress on the fly, and if you have a Mesh, automatically share the files with all units at startling speed. Currently supports Macs with OS X Leopard.
Synchromesh Spark is a software application to run fullscreen video on a single computer with transitions and simple but powerful clip lists - replacing DVD, VTR or DDR playback| Timecode Support |
|
|
|
|
Every clip that Synchromesh plays back has an associated timecode that will be played out with it. This is defined in the clip settings. It can be set from the media, if timecode is included, and is automatically used for clips recorded from video. The timecode is shown on the user interface, is available on the remote ports, is output from a dedicated connector on the DDR, and can be patched to an audio channel otherwise. The outputs are standard LTC, in EBU or SMPTE (DF or NDF) format, depending on the video format of the track being displayed. Timecode can also be overlaid on any video output. |
Synchromesh offers a range of digital playback solutions for event or installation use, using cutting edge GPU-based video processing.
We'd like to help you decide whether we have a solution for your challenges.