• 360 Cams, AutoCAD and many miles of fibre: the technology that goes into building an Oscars broadcast

  • Fourteen high-def projectors are stashed in a cramped, sweltering room between the ground floor and the nosebleeds inside the Kodak Theatre

  • After Oscar winners pass through a series of dark, narrow hallways, they end up at the revamped official portrait station

  • From a vantage point above the engraving station, web viewers can watch as winners' names are applied to their statuettes

  • A bird's-eye view camera at the Governors Ball will give web viewers an inside look at the Oscars after-party

  • No details missed for the Governor's Ball. Even the look, feel and spacing of the table settings is considered and tested

CIA-1435527631

Color Transformation Language for Digital Motion Picture Pipelines

Sponsored by

A worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive right to distribute, copy, modify, create derivatives, and use, in source and binary forms, is hereby granted, subject to acceptance of this license. Performance of any of the aforementioned acts indicates acceptance to be bound by the following terms and conditions: Redistributions in binary form must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the Disclaimer of Warranty in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 

The digital dilemma

From MP3 players to cell phone cameras to the Internet, digital technology has made our lives easier, more fun and – online pet videos aside – more productive. But as anyone who has ever suffered the heartbreak of a hard drive crash or tried to watch home movies recorded in ...

Museum

Academy Museum

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is building the world’s leading movie museum in the heart of Los Angeles. Located in the historic Wilshire May Company building on the campus of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the six stories Academy Museum was greenlighted by the Academy’s ...