London Landscape TV (HD 720p)
If you love London, you'll love London Landscape TV. This regular high-definition video podcast allows your TV or computer to become your own window overlooking one of the world's greatest and historic capital cities. Whether you live in London now, have stayed in London and wish to remember it, or you have never been but would love to come, let London Landscape TV be your visual guide to the UK's capital city. Each LLTV podcast episode is filmed in high-definition by Nick Lansley to bring each particular scene into sharp focus and allows the life of London unfold before the lens in high resolution detail. The finished movie file is available in the format MPEG4 H.264 Widescreen 720P HD which is compatible with most HD video players. You'll find LLTV in the iTunes Podcast Directory, Adobe Media Player catalog, TVTonic for Windows Media Player, Zune, and at various other podcast directory sites such as Juice, Doppler, Democracy, jPodder and Feedstation. You can use the RSS feed in any RS reader or pod-catcher application. Check out LLTV's website at http://www.londonlandscape.tv for all the ways of receiving, watching and enjoying episodes, and even re-using content under the terms of a creative commons license.
Imagine you've just arrived in London for the first time from an airport or railway station, and you're taking a taxi ride. What would you see? You would be absorbing the sights of the buildings, people, shops, other vehicles, signs, advert hoardings, driving on the left, and more. When you see a city for the first time like this, it's an intense sensory experience which I hope I have been able to recreate in this episode.

This episode takes you through two districts close to the centre of London: Brixton and Victoria. The camera is set up on the dashboard and sees everything I see in front of me as I drive the car through the heart of these places.

Technical note:
You will notice that this episode has two black bands at the top and bottom of the picture. I positioned the video as a narrower strip than the standard widescreen format because at the bottom of the original video footage is a close-up of the windscreen wiper! Since this does not contribute to the scene it would only take up the attention of the video compressor and soften the more useful parts of the picture. Lowering the picture and taking out the windscreen wiper using black bands means that much less data is absorbed here and the moving images are sharper. Even so, the moving pictures are softer than a true still landscape, so I'll present you HD landscape-o-philes (like me) with a nice still landscape next week, I promise!


Direct download: 11_LLTV_Driving_in_London_-_July_2007.mp4
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 12:37 PM
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