As Chris Aguilar gathered his gear after covering another
successful Molokai 2 Oahu Paddleboard World Championships - a grueling, 32-mile
race across open ocean between Oahu and Moloka'i - a media representative
approached him to ask for clips from a previous race year.
Chris leapt at the chance to help promote the sport of
paddleboard racing, and knew he had the perfect footage for the media outlet's
story, but it could be on one of any number of hard drives back in his
production office in LA. Over the years, Chris has emerged as the premier
documentary filmmaker and event coverage specialist for the tight-knit
paddleboard racing community. His hard work in tough conditions has earned him
several awards for his work, but it's also generated thousands of hours of
content.
A Sea of Hard Drives
Paddleboard races are grueling events - and filming them is
as well. Chris begins his day by putting all the equipment he'll need for the
day in a waterproof Pelican case, loading it onto a boat (or swimming it out when
there's no dock available). This means that he has to hand carry all of his
camera gear and batteries to cover an entire day's shooting.
When the event is over, it's common to quickly save the raw
and finished files to an external drive for immediate editing, deliver the
finished files then put that hard drive on the shelf - before dashing off to
the next shoot. And so, over the years, Chris estimates that he had gathered
about 20 terabytes of footage documenting the rise of the paddleboard community
over the years.
In more than a decade covering the sport of paddleboarding,
Chris has collected priceless footage documenting the sport, such as the moment
Jamie Mitchell won his tenth consecutive championship, and Kai Lenny's winning
performances in both stand up paddling and foil races. Chris knew that if
something happened to his physical drives, a significant portion of this
sport's history could be lost.
If his collection of the sport's history was vulnerable - he
also couldn't help promote the sport as fully as he wanted to. With all his
content locked on hard drives, having to manually search for content for each
media request or collaborative opportunity was incredibly limiting.
Taming the Tides
As someone with a professional background in technology,
Chris was intensely aware of how vulnerable all that priceless content was on
aging hard drives. His oldest drives were ten years old, far past the typical
consumer warranties of 36 months. Chris had already paid a drive reconstruction
team to salvage one-of-a-kind footage once, and didn't want to think about
having to do it for more.
As he began to study how to get that content safely onto
other storage where it could be secured and organized, he quickly ruled out
hardware-based solutions like NAS or RAID systems due to the high initial cost
and maintenance required. Chris needed access to his entire content library but
couldn't be tied to his production office.
He realized that cloud storage was ideal not only for
inexpensive storage, but also because it offered extremely high levels of
access. His files would be available and retrievable wherever and whenever he
needed them. Of all the solutions he looked at, Backblaze's B2 service was the
most straightforward and the simplest. Chris signed up, and began uploading his
most irreplaceable content first.
Chasing the Perfect Solution
With storage decided, Chris then began exhaustively
researching his content organization options. As a documentary filmmaker and
event coverage specialist, his workflow was closer to that of a remote team
building story packages in the field, while also accumulating valuable B-roll
footage that could be used in future stories or films of intense interest to
the paddleboard community. When combined with the archive of an entire career
of branded content, personal projects, photography, and more, the
organizational needs were demanding.
Most content management solutions demanded a dedicated
server with storage, and as Chris was rarely in his production office this
didn't fit his needs. Almost every solution was loaded with features he
couldn't use and didn't want. He felt like he could never find the sweet spot
of features that fit his agile, mobile shooting style while also helping him
collaborate and share content without forcing him to commit to thousands of
dollars a month in licensing fees.
A Digital Native Fit
At last, Chris came upon iconik. iconik's pay-as-you-use-it
solution allowed him to add collaborators on the fly and share his content
quickly by adding view-only licenses at no charge. With no up-front license fee
and support and maintenance built-in to the service, Chris knew that he had
found a solution that fit the way he wanted to work.
Best of all, iconik could ingest the content that Chris had
already uploaded to Backblaze without having to pull down, re-upload, and
re-ingest the content.
Chris liked that iconik and Backblaze worked well together
and that they were both digital-native services with clear and transparent
pricing and administration. At last, Chris could get all of his content freed
from his hard drives and into a single library where he could find and work
with any content quickly.
Jumping In
To get his content uploaded faster, Chris used Backblaze's
Fireball Rapid Ingest Service. Backblaze sent a 70TB NAS system to his office,
and Chris began copying over content from his loose hard drives. As Chris went
through the hard drives, he was doubly surprised: First, because he found many
forgotten gems of content that could fuel new projects, but more so because he
realized he had far more content than the 20 terabytes he originally estimated.
By the time he finished filling the Fireball, he had loaded closer to 60
terabytes.
After shipping the Fireball system back to Backblaze, where
its contents were uploaded to his storage buckets in the B2 Cloud servers,
where iconik ingested the new material, created thumbnails and proxies as
needed and added the metadata he had already applied to files on disk.
A New World of Creative Possibilities
With all of his content in one place, a world of new
creative possibility opened up. A footage request now goes from ‘several
weekends in the office going through hard drives' to a few keyword searches,
then sharing via iconik in a matter of minutes. With iconik and Backblaze
integrated in his workflow, Chris can cut a main story together while another
collaborator cuts short clips for social media from the same footage - speeding
up his time to complete a story while tremendously boosting an event's coverage
in real time.
Most intriguing, though, is the realization that he can
re-cut, and re-imagine projects he'd done years earlier. With access to the
original source files at his fingertips, he can pull together an entirely new
package quickly, and cut everything in a way that matches his current style.
Above all, Chris has peace of mind knowing that his content is, at last, safely
archived, and all in one library where he can keep the spirit of sharing,
collaboration, and community alive for the sport that he loves.