5 January 2008

another walking video

This is the first* video I've shot with my mobile phone. I think I'll stick to using my nicer digital camera to take videos, a device intended for such purposes, and not something that ultimately is meant to be a phone.

So what's in the clip below? Natalya and I were running around some hallways, and I decided to shoot a little footage, for, um, posterity or whatever.

There isn't really any sound (if you can't see anything click here) - you can hear her laugh around seven seconds, but that's about it. The main highlight is around the fourteen second mark, when she stumbles sideways, notices something on the wall, and tries to shove whatever she's carrying into it.

Yes, that's an electrical socket, and no, the footage was not followed by her falling over, crying, with her hair all sticking up. The thing in her hands that is almost completely unrecognizable (due to the bad video quality) is a wooden puzzle piece, and fortunately not a conductor. So it's possible she learned about insulators, but not likely.

I almost learned something, though. Here I was holding the camera(-phone) and just letting her do whatever she wanted, safe or not, and I didn't even think to stop her. I'd often wondered why people managed to make all of those videos that show up on youtube or America's Funniest Home Videos of something painful or stupid, without dropping the camera and stepping in to help. Well, it seems to just happen that way, I guess. I'd like to figure out why.

Maybe it's because cameras aren't exactly cheap. I know I'd be in a lot of trouble if I dropped, and broke, my phone, though not as much trouble as an electrified toddler.


*To be fair, it's actually the first two videos I've taken, edited haphazardly together with Windows Movie Maker. I think if I intend to do any real video editing, I know I'll use a better camera and better software.

11 October 2007

pitter patter

I shot this footage yesterday. If the player below isn't working, click this link to see it. It's not long - around eleven seconds.

9 March 2007

and now for something completely different

... a baby rolling over! If you can't see the player below, click here to see the video.

The funny thing is, of course, that by the time I finally got around to uploading this, she's mastered the front-to-back roll as well, so she can now roll over and over and over*.

I've also uploaded a few more pictures to the photo album, which means I'm only about a hundred behind, or so.


* I guess I'll just have to build a tracking dolly so I can get a film of that.