|  | Posted by evieg on 10/17/05 11:33 
John <jlwsecure-usenet5@yahoo.com> wrote innews:Xns971E54C1DFBCEjlwsecure@207.115.63.158:
 
 > evieg <evieg@noway.com> wrote in
 > news:Xns971B8AE321D60eviegnowaycom@207.69.189.191:
 >
 >>
 >> which Sony HandyCam do you have?  I thought I would try digital over
 >> my Sony Hi8 - so I jumped ship and ended up with a JVC mini-DV model
 >> that I quickly returned.  The JVC would only recognize USB for Motion
 >> JPEG's and not for any DV - needed to use the s-video or Firewire.
 >
 >
 > I have a TRV280  Digital 8.
 >
 >
 >>
 >> The first thing you need to do is learn if sound can be carried over
 >> the USB connection.  On my Sony Hi8 - the S-video jack is vastly
 >> superior for video than the composite out cable - but sound is only
 >> carried via the composite cable - so both need to be connected when I
 >> capture - choosng S-video for video and line-in from the composite
 >> connection for the audio.
 >
 >
 > Sound *is* carried over the USB connection.  It works fine using
 > Windows Movie maker, and the capture software that came with the
 > camera.  The problem with these programs is that for some reason, the
 > captured video quality is not what I would call the best.  I've come
 > *close* to having a good DVD production, but close does not count.
 >
 >
 >>
 >> If you have a Firewire port on the Camcorder - then by all means
 >> obtain a firewire card and cable to connect that way -
 >
 > The Camcorder *does* have a firewire connection.  Or something called
 > iLink, which I believe is the same thing.  I don't have that hardware
 > capability yet, so I want to get by with the cheapest solution
 > possible.
 
 From what I have read Sony is using proprietary software and from what I
 gather few folks are writing programs to support USB 2.0 for video capture.
 Technically USB 2.0 has a higher bandwidth capability than Firewire - see
 http://www.digit-life.com/articles/usb20vsfirewire/ - but the difference is
 negligible - and does require special software.
 
 Of course the IEEE1394 standard also requires special software - but it is
 recognized within XP as a capture device - so little is needed to have it
 run for anything.  Perhaps in Vista USB 2.0 will get the boost it needs.
 
 That said - a poster stated a good point - a PCI firewire card is cheap.
 You can get a basic port for about $14.00 from newegg.com - and if you
 watch it closely - sometimes shipping for 99c.  You will need a cable,
 which can be $5.00 - $7.00 - again watching close.
 
 Obtain a copy of Virtualdub-MPEG2 at -
 
 http://fcchandler.home.comcast.net/stable/
 
 and see if you device can be picked up within the capture settings of Vdub.
 Avery Lee who wrote the original Virtualdub program has made a real effort
 to include any device handled by a WDM driver to be classified as a capture
 device.  It will not start out in that mode - you will need to select File>
 Capture AVI>Device>and then select your capture device.
 
 If that freeware solution does not handle your cam - then you will need a
 Firewire card - or a TV-Card.  What you will find is that digital does not
 carry the true picture you remember - as it must compress each frame of
 video - 30 frames per second - with two fields per frame - each field being
 a complete "picture" - so in an "action/motion" shot - it simply drops
 frames and/or fields.
 
 For clarity you need film and/or tape to equal a DVD production as no
 frames and/or fields are ever dropped.  A DVD was shot originally using a
 Movie Camera that had no fields - just took a picture of everything it saw
 and recorded to film one single photograph per frame times 24fps per second
 (on average).  Our small camcorders cannot equal that.
 
 But a camcorder that captures according to TV-standards can do so nicely
 and play-back correctly using tape.  A digital device basically has a small
 computer-chip built-in to it and when push-comes-to-shove cannot equal an
 analog camcorder.  That is the main reason I returned mine.
 
 But if you like digital - and know that your machine is not equal to the
 $3,200 digital Sony for Broadcast TV Stations - then you will miss things
 on your captures and there is no way to compensate for that.
 
 I would guess you are probably getting the best you will ever get out of
 the Digital Cam you have - but you will not know for sure until you buy a
 Firewire Card and Cable together for about $20.00.
 
 Digital is coming - just not there yet in my humble and useless estimation
 - until it is exactly as good as analog.
 
 If you have the ability to return it and obtain an analog Sony - buy a TV-
 Card - and you will be more than pleased with DVD quality guaranteed.  It
 is a gamble with digital.
 
 
 hope this helps.
 
 I just know my old black and white 127 camera from the days I was a kid
 produced vastly superior photographs than any digital still camera I have
 yet to run across - and the Sony analog I have does the same versus
 digital.  Some things better - but if object is to produce a DVD for
 playback on a TV - no compettition.
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