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© 2010 Martin Professional A/S
Maxedia 4
Planning a Show
Every minuet you spend planning your show will save you hours of headaches down the road.
Because the Maxedia is so versatile and the shows it will be used on are so varied, there is no one
way to set it up to run a show. There are a few questions to ask yourself (and/or your video and
lighting crews) before starting. In this section we will look at some of these questions, that may seem
very basic, and how the answers to them will effect how you set-up your Maxedia. Some of these
questions include:
Am I broadcasting to screens, pixelmapping lighting/LED fixtures, or both?
Is the Maxedia running the screens directly or is it being routed thru a video switcher?
What type of video signal is required by the video system?
Are the screens LED walls, televisions, soft LED, projectors.....?
How many screens are there?
Do any screens receive the same content?
What is the resolution and size of the screens?
Which fixtures are being pixelmapped?
Will the entire lighting rig be pixelmapped?
How will the pixelmapping DMX get to the rig?
Where will I program my cues?
Is there any pre-produced media specific to this show?
Will there be a live camera feed to capture and run thru the Maxedia engine?
How will the Maxedia be controlled?
Screens
Am I broadcasting to screens, pixelmapping lighting/LED fixtures, or both?
How many screens are there?
Do any screens receive the same content?
These three questions help you determine how many Maxedia servers you will require. One
Maxedia can output two Engines at once. If you only have one or two screens or if the same cue
will ALWAYS be running on all screens and some pixelmapping to do you can run the show on
one machine. If you want to be able to feed a discreet feed to multiple screens you will need
multiple machines.
Is the Maxedia running the screens directly or is it being routed thru a video switcher?
What type of video signal is required by the video system?
Where the Maxedia going to be located during the show can in large part be determined by the
destination of your output, type of input required and how far that signal can travel without signal
loss. If the Maxedia is sending a VGA signal directly to a projector, you will need to have the
Maxedia close to the projector because of the limited range of a VGA signal. If you are sending
the signal to a switcher, you may need to use a scan converter to change the Maxedia's VGA or
DVI output to SDI. Coordinate with the video techs to be sure you/they have everything you/they
will need to integrate the systems.
Are the screens LED walls, televisions, soft LED, projectors.....?
What is the resolution and size of the screens?
Cues will read differently on different screens. What may be stunning content on your
programming monitor may be fairly average on a given screen type (the converse is also true,
particularly with low resolution screens). Time to program and tweak cues on the real screens is
invaluable.
Summary of Contents for Maxedia 4
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