Satis

L’innovation au service de la création

5 & 6 NOVEMBRE 2019

La Plaine-Saint-Denis
Docks de Paris
Grand Paris

Satis

L’innovation au service de la création

5 & 6 NOVEMBRE 2019

La Plaine-Saint-Denis
Docks de Paris
Grand Paris

IASA

IASA 2019 – 50th Annual Conference

The 50th Annual Conference of the International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) will be held from Monday 30th September – Thursday 3rd October 2019 at the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, in Hilversum, Netherlands.

The International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) was established in 1969 in Amsterdam to function as a medium for international co-operation between archives that preserve recorded sound and audiovisual documents.

IASA has members from 70 countries representing a broad palette of audiovisual archives and personal interests which are distinguished by their focus on particular subjects and areas, eg archives for all sorts of musical recordings, historic, literary, folkloric and ethnological sound documents, theatre productions and oral history interviews, bio-acoustics, environmental and medical sounds, linguistic and dialect recordings, as well as recordings for forensic purposes.

IASA

IASA 2019 – 50th Annual Conference

The 50th Annual Conference of the International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) will be held from Monday 30th September – Thursday 3rd October 2019 at the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, in Hilversum, Netherlands.

The International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) was established in 1969 in Amsterdam to function as a medium for international co-operation between archives that preserve recorded sound and audiovisual documents.

IASA has members from 70 countries representing a broad palette of audiovisual archives and personal interests which are distinguished by their focus on particular subjects and areas, eg archives for all sorts of musical recordings, historic, literary, folkloric and ethnological sound documents, theatre productions and oral history interviews, bio-acoustics, environmental and medical sounds, linguistic and dialect recordings, as well as recordings for forensic purposes.

ibc 2019

We are happy to announce that we will be represented at the ibc again this year and look forward to your visit! The next stages of development of our successful film scanners, like the Spinner S 8k, the Spinner I film inspection table and the flashscan Nova 2.5k & 4k with the MWA EASY WET GATE will be demonstrated. Stay tuned!

ibc 2019

We are happy to announce that we will be represented at the ibc again this year and look forward to your visit! The next stages of development of our successful film scanners, like the Spinner S 8k, the Spinner I film inspection table and the flashscan Nova 2.5k & 4k with the MWA EASY WET GATE will be demonstrated. Stay tuned!

Il Cinema Ritrovato 2019

Join us during the festival and discuss with us to ensure high quality digitisation of your films using MWA Nova film scanners. In case you don’t have the chance to join Il Cinema Ritrovato please get in touch directly or meet upcomming events e.g. the ibc exhibition..

Il Cinema Ritrovato 2019

Join us during the festival and discuss with us to ensure high quality digitisation of your films using MWA Nova film scanners. In case you don’t have the chance to join Il Cinema Ritrovato please get in touch directly or meet upcomming events e.g. the ibc exhibition..

MOKE

Historically valuable film material, dating from the first half of the last century, is prone to decay. A non‐contact magneto‐optical method according to Faraday was used by MWA’s development partner 5micron GmbH to directly read the magnetization in the tape as an imaging of the magnetic signature (patent pending). For this purpose MWA has developed a special winding table which integrates the revolutionary sensor system and enables the evaluation of the analogue waveform over the entire length of the tape. The sensor system will be integrated into existing film copying tables or future digitization or restoration systems. All main octaves (six main octaves corresponding to 125 Hz to 8000 Hz) can be captured, mapped, corrected, and reproduced.