Minggu, 03 November 2013

What was the hardest Christmas present for you to buy this year?

Q. 1. Barbie Dreamhouse--my 9 year old wants this soooo bad...I cannot find it online or anywhere in stock...so I ended up getting her the seperate glamour rooms that Barbie has.
2. Zhu Zhu...I lucked on 4 back in November at Walmart. Sold 3 on ebay and kept one to put under the tree on Friday.
and
3. ICarly Camcorder--$79 for this camcorder and no one has it in stock anywhere!!!

A. MY MOMS
AND MY BF
A burberry perfume
and some pradas sneakers =]


how to transfer the videos from my canon digital video camcorder MVX10i to my mac?
Q. Hi i have a old digital video camcorder thats like 10 years old but i wonder how to transfer the videos form it to the mac. Its a MVX10i and connected with the cord and to the mac and nothing happend. i want to transfer every single video cassette to the mac and i have like 20 of them it have alot on import an stuffs in it so please help

A. The Canon MVX10i is a standard definition video, consumer grade, camcorder that records low compression, high quality video to miniDV tape.

Link to the manual:
http://files.canon-europe.com/files/soft24435/Manual/MVX10i_CUG_EN.pdf
This is the English version.

It behaves like any other miniDV tape based camcorder (with one exception form JVC that I will not address here).

Camcorder OFF. Connect a firewire cable (not USB) to the camcorder's DV port (not USB) and the Mac's firewire port (not USB). There was no firewire cable in the box with the camcorder. You did not tell us which "cord" you connected to your Mac - but if it was the USB cable that was in the box, that will allow transfer of stills from the camcorder's flash memory only. It will not transfer video from the digital tape. You *must* use a firewire cable.

See page 9 for the location of the camcorder's DV port. DV, firewire, IEEE1394 and i.Link are all the same thing. They are not USB and are not interchangeable with USB. USB-to-firewire cable/converter/adapter things will not work.

The camcorder's DV port is a 4-pin firewire connector. We do not know which Mac you are using. Older Macs all had a 6-Pin firewire port. More recent Macs either have no firewire port (MacBook Air, some versions of MacBook) or a 9-pin firewire port ... and most new Macs have a Thunderbolt port that will need a Thunderbolt-to-firewire adapter tail/cable from Apple (about $40) that provides a 9-pin firewire port. So... without knowing which Mac you have we don't know if you need a 4-pin to 6-pin firewire cable or 4-pin to 9-pin firewire cable.

Assuming you correctly connect the camcorder's DV port to the Mac's firewire port, and the Mac is on, *now* you can turn on the camcorder and put it into "Play (VCR)" mode. See the power/mode switch on page 10 of the manual. LOCK the video (there is a small tab on the back of the tape - it should be "open" to be locked). Rewind the video in the camcorder.

Launch iMovie. It will been in the Dock or in the Applications folder of the Mac. Name the file and set the destination of the video files for storage. Under File, select Import or Capture and the video should start importing.

ALERT: If the miniDV tapes are full, that is 60 minutes of video. This 60 minutes of imported video will consume about 14 gig of computer hard drive space when imported to iMovie. 14 gig x 20 tapes = 280 gig of computer hard drive space. We don't know how much available space there is on your Mac's hard drive. Consider using an external drive (connected using USB) for the videoeidinting project file storage.





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