The Atomos Shogun has become the first recorder to
implement Avid’s new DNxHR 4K recording format, which is included in AtomOS 6.2 (available as a free download).
The 4K $1,995/£1,299 Shogun has been phenomenally successful, with more
than 10,000 sold in just two months. “That was my six-month forecast. 4K is really taking off,” said CEO, Jeromy
Young (pictured above), at BVE2015.
It is mainly selling to users of Sony’s new
FS7 (who can use it to record 10-bit over both HDMI and SDI), the low-light
Sony A7s DSLR, and Panasonic’s GH4. “They are the main three cameras really
driving 4K at the moment,” he said.
Some Shogun users had wondered why Atomos
was being so slow to add DNxHD recording to the Shogun, but the delay was due
to its engineers working on the 4K version, which he believes will have a big
impact as so many 4K/Ultra HD cameras are coming out.
AtomOS 6.2 also includes 3D look-up tables,
which can be uploaded from editing packages. These can be used just on the
Shogun’s screen, or on both screen and output (for monitoring), or can be
burned in (for recording), a flexible implementation that he said “wasn’t easy.
It required a lot of research.”
There is also down conversion to
high-quality HD on output (both for loop out during recording and playback), as
most infrastructure is still HD.
By David Fox
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