Q. I looked at the guide and it said to put a CD in but it never came with a CD. It is a Digital Concepts pink video camera and the CD program was supposed to be Kids Imaging Studio.
A. i have the same camera and it didn't come with a cd. i need help uploading videos from it with the sd card.
What kind of video camera should we get?
Q. Which type of video camera is best to work with (and why do you think so)?
harddrive
memory stick
mini-CDs
We're having a kid and figure it's time to buy one. We're thinking get a less expensive one, and wait until the HD recording ones come down in price.
Thanks!
harddrive
memory stick
mini-CDs
We're having a kid and figure it's time to buy one. We're thinking get a less expensive one, and wait until the HD recording ones come down in price.
Thanks!
A. these are pictures you want to keep for decades. i would go with miniDV now. because this format is also used professionally, software and hardware support for this camera will be available for a long time. And it is available at good economy, but don't let the price fool you, it is exceptionally good video quality.
As to hard drive? that will take a lot of maintenance because you will have to go through several transfer steps before suitable for permanent storage. Remember, most people change out their computers (and hard drives) every 3 to 4 years. So keeping as a hard drive file facilitates editing now but is not an option for the long run. You will have to burn DVDs eventually or risk losing to obsolescence.
memory stick? even worse for long term storage. tape for 80 minutes of miniDV is 3 or 4 bucks. who can afford to buy a memory stick for every shooting event?
miniCD? no way, the video will be so compressed that moving objects such as kids running will be unrecognizable.
As to hard drive? that will take a lot of maintenance because you will have to go through several transfer steps before suitable for permanent storage. Remember, most people change out their computers (and hard drives) every 3 to 4 years. So keeping as a hard drive file facilitates editing now but is not an option for the long run. You will have to burn DVDs eventually or risk losing to obsolescence.
memory stick? even worse for long term storage. tape for 80 minutes of miniDV is 3 or 4 bucks. who can afford to buy a memory stick for every shooting event?
miniCD? no way, the video will be so compressed that moving objects such as kids running will be unrecognizable.
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