...and the Oscar goes to—world-famous EBIT alumnus

Posted on May 20, 2021

Nicol Verheem obtained a degree in electrical and electronic engineering from the University of Pretoria and has since been honoured by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in the Scientific and Technical Awards (Sci-Tech) category.

Verheem’s company invented the Teradek Bolt, a wireless radio transmitter that can transmit uncompressed video to a receiver over 3km away with no delay. His innovative project started in 2010, when digital cinematography was relatively new and cinematographers were eager to use cameras in more flexible ways, increasingly making use of Steadicams, dollies, jib arms, and cranes (plus, drones were taking off ), but coaxial cables were holding things back. Teradek decided that this wasn’t good enough.

The team developed a miniature wireless transmitter, the Teradek Cube, which was small enough to mount on a digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) camera and presented a big opportunity in untethering the monitor from the camera. It was capable and sturdy, yet still affordable. However, it had a small but noticeable delay of about four frames. They then discovered Amimon’s technology, which managed to send uncompressed video over a wireless signal without any delay, but the product was meant for living rooms rather than cinema production.

Teradek and Amimon worked closely together to refine the technology and create the Teradek Bolt. Over 100 000 systems have been sold, and many productions around the world have benefited from cameras being freed from their cables.

- Author Estie Powell

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