Q. Hi,
I've just bought the Sony A77 and I'm wondering how long does this memory card last for as in how many hours can it record for?
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sony-Class-Secure-Digital-Memory/dp/B00793AQ8C/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1373984109&sr=8-1&keywords=sony+sdhc+32gb+class10
I THINK YOU HAVE MISUNDERSTOOD MY QUESTION
I've just bought the Sony A77 and I'm wondering how long does this memory card last for as in how many hours can it record for?
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sony-Class-Secure-Digital-Memory/dp/B00793AQ8C/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1373984109&sr=8-1&keywords=sony+sdhc+32gb+class10
I THINK YOU HAVE MISUNDERSTOOD MY QUESTION
A. I presume you mean the Sony SLT-A77...
Read the manual:
http://www.docs.sony.com/release/SLT-A77_A77V.pdf
Page 229.
Please note on page 230 there is a video single sequence limitation of 29 minutes (auto shutoff) and the internal temperature will overheat (pages 38, 228, 229) during long video sequence capture. Cool down is a really long time.
And be careful of the autofocus and zoom motor noise being recorded... pages 38. Manual mode or external mic is required.
This does not mean a dSLR cannot capture good video - they can. But video capture is a secondary, convenience feature and you need to deal with workarounds not usually found in a camcorder. If you purchased the A77 specifically for video (and especially if long sequences are required) you have the wrong tool for the job.
You'll find lots more helpful information in the manual.
Good luck.
Read the manual:
http://www.docs.sony.com/release/SLT-A77_A77V.pdf
Page 229.
Please note on page 230 there is a video single sequence limitation of 29 minutes (auto shutoff) and the internal temperature will overheat (pages 38, 228, 229) during long video sequence capture. Cool down is a really long time.
And be careful of the autofocus and zoom motor noise being recorded... pages 38. Manual mode or external mic is required.
This does not mean a dSLR cannot capture good video - they can. But video capture is a secondary, convenience feature and you need to deal with workarounds not usually found in a camcorder. If you purchased the A77 specifically for video (and especially if long sequences are required) you have the wrong tool for the job.
You'll find lots more helpful information in the manual.
Good luck.
How do I get video's from my computer on to a CD...which can then play in the UK and Canada???
Q. I've got some video's from my camcorder (sony DCR DVD106E) which has small 8cm DVD-RWs, which I then put onto my PC...I now want to put thm onto a normal 12cm CD so that they play on DVD players in England and canada...has anyone got any idea on how to do this??
Please help!
Please help!
A. you have a lot of issues to deal with. first not all DVD players can handle VCDs. VCDs use MPEG1 which is different from MPEG2 used on DVD movies. But lets say they can. Next Canada and UK have totally different video systems. Canada has 30 fps NTSC and UK uses 25 fps PAL. However since the source is miniDVD, i am assuming that the program length is under 20 minutes. That being the case, you should be able to fit 2 files on the VCD, one in NTSC and another in PAL. Since the miniDVD is mpeg2 compressed, any decent software should be able to change frame rate easily between systems since most of the frames are interpolated anyway. Next your computer needs software to generate the appropriate mpeg1 files and a burner that understands generation of VCD recordings.
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