| 
	
 | 
 Posted by GMAN on 12/05/06 04:58 
In article <12n8grvmpqork7a@corp.supernews.com>, "Richard Crowley" <rcrowley@xpr7t.net> wrote: 
>"Mike Kujbida" wrote ... 
>> bill wrote: 
>>> I currently have around 30 hours of DV format video, I'm wondering  
>>> what 
>>> the best codec is to use to archive this video with to save space but 
>>> still preserve the video to the extent it can be opened and accessed  
>>> in 
>>> original NLE projects that used it before the conversion. 
>>> 
>>> I'm not too fussed on quality loss but it shouldn't be too drastic  
>>> but 
>>> the format must still be an easily editable format. (ie. 
>>> Intra-frames...ect,) 
>>> 
>>> Thanks, 
>>> bill 
>> 
>> 
>> The best method is to save the original DV tapes. 
>> Make duplicates (you won't lose anything as it's digital) and store  
>> the 
>> copies somewhere safe, preferably in a temperature & humidty  
>> controlled 
>> environment. 
>> The other option is to dump the footage to external hard drives. 
>> They're cheap these days and 2 x 250 GB drives would be enough to  
>> store 
>> 30 hrs.  Once again, store the drives in a safe place and remember to 
>> check them periodically as drives have been know to go bad. 
> 
>Saving the native DV (NOT ADDITIONALLY COMPRESSED) 
>on a hard drive is a reasonable "backup", but the original 
>DV tapes have a much better expectation of archival life 
>expectancy than anything you can do on your home computer, 
>including hard drives.  But perhaps I am just bitter at having 
>lost 6 months of editing work on 12 programs to a hard 
>drive failure. :-(( 
> 
> 
 
One word, "RAID"
 
  
Navigation:
[Reply to this message] 
 |