JVC First With A HD-Based Consumer Camcorder 229
kamesh writes "David Pogue writes in nytimes.com 'The days of storing computer data, music collections and Hollywood movies on spools of tape will soon be completely gone....JVC is the first company to see that particular light. Next month, it will release its new Everio GZ-MC100 and GZ-MC200.' Are tape based camcorders destined to die soon?"
Why stop at camcorders? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why stop at camcorders? (Score:4, Interesting)
Given that tapes are cheaper and more reliable then hard drives what are you looking for?
Re:Why stop at camcorders? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why stop at camcorders? (Score:2)
Like many other IT Directors I'm looking and waiting for something that isn't yet available. Tape units are lacking...their capacity/price ratio hasn't kept up with the storage systems and their write speeds are a hinderance when backing up large quantities of data. In addition tapes aren't as reliable as I'd like. What I want doesn't yet exist...otherwise I'd be using it. But once it is practical you can be
Re:Why stop at camcorders? (Score:2)
Re:Why stop at camcorders? (Score:2)
Re:Why stop at camcorders? (Score:2)
Re:Why stop at camcorders? (Score:2)
Oh great. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh great. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, fragmentation isn't exactly a big problem for video storage. You're dealing with few, large files being written to disk in a linear fashion.
Re:Oh great. (Score:2, Informative)
After six months of use, the average fragmentation was under 1% for 5 different types of users. I know, I know, this is on a Mac. But I'm sure there are other modern file systems that don't fragment, such as ext3 or reiser. I just haven't looked it up.
Re:Oh great. (Score:5, Informative)
Well, if you are getting painfully technical about it, that is, barely, true.
However, while all filesystems may fragment data, most good ones are easily able to keep the fragmentation down under 1%.
My own BSD system is using FFS (UFS). I just checked, and my home partition is under 0.0% fragmentation, even though it's 90% full, and my most fragmented filesystem is nearly-full
With a video camera, the same filesystems could rather easily keep the fragmentation down under 0.001%. Technically fragmented, but nominally so.
I wish I knew what was going through the minds of the mods that marked this insightful.
No Mac Support? (Score:5, Insightful)
hmm... someone need to make a mac friendly one of these with
an iPod dock to use iPod mini's as the removable hard drive
...and another thing (Score:5, Insightful)
And no viewfinder! What are you going to do on a sunny day when the LCD is all washed out... shoot in a random direction?
For over a grand, I'd expect more thought put into how a camcorder is actually USED.
Re:...and another thing (Score:2)
They all nowadays have the nifty 2" or larger swing-out lcd panel (color). But, the viewfinder is black and white.... ?? Why not put a color viewfinder in as well!!! I have an older 8mm sony that I bought specifically because it had a color viewfinder... I guess I could deal with a B&W, but heck I'd rather have a color viewfinder than a swing-out lcd
Re:...and another thing (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:...and another thing (Score:2)
Re:...and another thing (Score:2)
Re:...and another thing (Score:2)
I'm so sorry to hear that you've only got one eye. How'd you lose the other one?
(I kid, I kid.)
Re:...and another thing (Score:2)
Re:...and another thing (Score:2)
Of course, if I had my way I'd lug a pair of scopes along on every shoot, but the price tag kinda puts me off that.
This reminds me of a story about the engineer for a local public access station. He's barely good enough for public access, even. Nothing ever gets fixed, and nothing works 100%. We got some new camera
Re:...and another thing (Score:3, Interesting)
Ha, ha! If this were true, you'd expect more games to be actually fun to play, or big-budget movies to be worth watching.
The problem with the consumer electronics industry, as in these other industries, is that they are trying to get you to BUY the damn thing. They don't care about what you do after that point, because most of the time the consumer isn't going to really know at the moment of deciding to buy, either.
So, i
In-Camera Editing (Score:2)
Like it or not, in-camera editing [kent.edu] is an important, standard capability, without which videographers would oftentimes find themselves at a loss. It may not be the ideal way to edit film and video, but the results can be superb [omniproductions.co.uk].
Re:No Mac Support? (Score:2)
Yum, dream coming true soon?:
1. Hook iPod up to Canon XL1
2. Go out an shoot some video directly to iPod in MiniDV format.
3. Get back to lab and edit video on G5 directly from iPod.
4. Export from Final Cut to local drive ready for encoding.
The only missing link is a way to connect the iPod to the Canon XL1!
Re:No Mac Support? (Score:2)
320p is definitely not high def.
compact flash (Score:2)
Re:No Mac Support? (Score:2)
they could have done a lot better than just _working_ with final cut pro or imovie... they could have integrated with the programs... say they mounted the camera as a disk when it plugs in and the camera gives the option of the camera saving footag
Re:No Mac Support? (Score:2)
If you've got an MPEG-2 codec, you can bring MPEG-2 content into iMovie. You just have to be prepared to wait a bit for iMovie to do the conversion to DV format.
too small (Score:4, Insightful)
If I go on a trip, I want to minimize the amount of stuff I have to lug around... and when I'm on vacation, I don't want to carry a laptop around just so I can dump my footage.
Gimme at least 120gb and then I'll start being interested.
Re:too small (Score:2)
Re:too small (Score:4, Funny)
They should put some kind of removable media in it, like a tape drive or something so you can back up the hard drive on long trips without needing a laptop. On second thought, why don't they make camcorders that just record directly to inexpensive tapes and forgo the hard drive altogether? I'd buy one of those.
Why not both?? (Score:3, Insightful)
That would let you make cheap backups on the road or offload your video whenever you ran out of HD space (just pick up a few $4 minitapes anywhere), or copy video from an existing tape, etc.
Any of the knowledgeable folk in the DV/MPEG discussion above have technical objections or feasibility comm
The article misses the point (Score:5, Insightful)
To me, the real advance would be a camcorder that used a 60gb (or larger) hard drive like the ipod and directly recorded mpeg2 or mpeg 4. I don't need the thing to be microscopic, it has to be big enough to hold and have a decent battery life. Obviously it would need firewire of USB2.
Does anyone have a camera like that coming?
Re:The article misses the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The article misses the point (Score:3, Interesting)
This is true. However, I would bet that a majority of "consumers" would love to have a hard-drive based camcorder that does a good job at compression without artifacts, because they just play the images back for other family members etc, and don't edit (like I'm assuming you do....)
Now, there's a perfect solution for everyone, and hopefully in the long term, they will remain at similar pricing points. However, if more people buy camcorders that can record 80 hours of Mpeg2 t
FYI, DV=compressed (Score:3, Informative)
Most importantly is that it does not do difference frame encoding, each frame is compressed completely independently of all others. DV is basically a Motion JPEG variant. Not the most efficient compression algorithm, but good if you need to edit your video since you can split the video at any frame. (As opposed to MPEG, which requires you to recompress the video if you want to split anywhere other than a keyframe.)
Re:The article misses the point (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The article misses the point (Score:2)
Re:The article misses the point (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The article misses the point (Score:2)
You could get much more video if you reduced the quality to DVD quality, but video editing programs like Premier work much better with DV - probably because it's I-frame only, and you don't have inter-frame dependencies to manage.
Personally, I'd settle for 15GB at DV quality. That would give about the same quality (DV for one hour) as a single mini-DV tape. That would work for me, because I always travel with my FireWire-equipped laptop,
Re:The article misses the point (Score:3, Informative)
No. DV is higher quality because it's not compressed as much. DV is like MPEG-2 with I-frames only. DVD is MPEG-2 with a series of I-, B-, and P-frames. The B- and P- frames compress better than I-frames only, but lose quality.
DVD can reach higher qualities IF you use high bit rates and spend a LOT of computation time to compute the B- and P-frames. But a camera that has to stream to hard disk in realtime is NOT going to be able to put that kind of horsepower into computing t
Death to tape/optical (Score:2)
I absolutely hate tape and optical finally a company gets a clue and goes with something better, and possibly cheaper.
Now let's hope they were thoughtfull enough to leave consumer access to the HD so we can dump the standard drive and super size it with something better.
Re:Death to tape/optical (Score:2)
Also why no MPEG-4? MPEG-2 is so 90's
Re:Death to tape/optical (Score:2)
Re:Death to tape/optical (Score:2)
Not for video (Score:2)
I'm sure that as small HD's get more storage space it'll become popular for home video users that just want to shoot a little footage, but it's not going anywhere any time soon.
Re:Not for video (Score:2)
Another strategy would to be to throw in a WiFi card and you can have your "all day" capability as the camera du
www.jvc.com connection refused after 9 comments !! (Score:5, Funny)
Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
The mustek cameras that do MPEG-4 ASP (~60% of MPEG-2 bitrate) have been out for a while, but only use SD/MMC storage (no microdrives..) - see http://www.mustek.de/eng_/html/produkte/dv5000.ht m [mustek.de]
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
I like that they're ~$100... but I'm worried that the video/audio quality is going to be complete garbage and not worth the effort...
Anyone done a review/comparison of the popular models? Putting it all together from various review sites is limited at best... direct comparison is better.
If you don't want to register... (Score:3, Informative)
Only if the disk is easily replaceable (Score:2, Insightful)
Unloading the drive to free up space just isn't good enough. Not everyone carries a notebook around and I know I'd hate to loose my previous work just because something interesting happend just now and the disk is full.
But with easily replacable standard disks - sure thing!
Acronym Collision!!! (Score:4, Funny)
HD = Hard Drive
HD = High Definition
Confusion in future Slashdot articles = imminent
No,not so soon (Score:2, Interesting)
I dont think so.
Hard drive based have a disadvantage as there is no way to increase the offered storage space( Though 300 mins of video in this particular product seems pretty good , but still if going for a vacation I may rather carry some extra tapes( which are quite cheap) than keep transferring the video to a computer.
Also hard disc based camcorders are known to be more fragile than tape based( as well as cd-rom and flash memory based)
first? (Score:4, Informative)
How is JVC first when i spotted my eye on this 4MP Sanyo [yahoo.com] several months ago! (it was RELEASED on september 10th!)
I'm always suspicious of companies that claim 'first' status. Are there any other companies which beat JVC out the door on this?
Re:first? (Score:2, Informative)
SD would be a funny acronym to use for a hard drive, particularly since secure digital memory cards already use it.
Re:first? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:first? (Score:2, Funny)
Gee, that must have hurt! Is it still there?
Holly Granola (Score:3, Interesting)
You know, IPod became very successful with harddrives, how is this different? Except that the tape was cheap storage media (relatively cheap) so this may not become as ubiquitous as HDs in MP3 players, I mean people still use VHS tapes (I haven't used them in about 2 years though.)
I think tape is still good for backup storage and it is cheap, and it is easy to use and reuse, so it is not going away yet.
Re:Holly Granola (Score:2)
Tapes gone? (Score:4, Interesting)
Uh. I hope not.
Tapes are the most reliable and versatile medium for massive data storage and even the tapes can't keep up with the demand.
On my home computer, I've got 500+ MB worth of results from simulations that I would like to back up but there's just no affordable way to do that.
And no, having the data on RAID-arrays or copying it onto spare hard drives is not "backing the data up".
Re:Tapes gone? (Score:2)
Re:Tapes gone? (Score:2)
USB hard disks for off-site backup (Score:2)
I used to be an advocate of tape backup, but I just can't justify it anymore.
Re:USB hard disks for off-site backup (Score:2)
If you were really paranoid about backup security, y
Re:Tapes gone? (Score:2)
Dude, you need to check out this if you need to back up that much data. I use it all the time to back stuff up:
Back up device 1 [newegg.com]
If you want to look towards the future, you can drop a few more bucks now and buy this, it will handle your data backup needs for a long time to come I suspect:
Back up device 2 [newegg.com]
Keep this hush hush though... this technology is bl
Costs (Score:2)
The hard drive needs to be removable... (Score:2, Redundant)
HD-based portable video-corders.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:HD-based portable video-corders.... (Score:2)
Aiptek CF Digital Cam(era)corders (Score:2)
I don't know if all tape based camcorders are doomed to die. Tape still has a lot of life left in it, just look at your local news production facility. Chances are very good that they are using a Betamax camcorder for on the spot feeds, etc.
With that being said, however, I am going to be buying an http://www.aiptek.com/ [aiptek.com] aiptek digital camera for my wife for Christmas. The DV3100 model is just under $100 US, uses Compact Flash (CF) which our other Kodak camera uses, and can record up to 180 minutes of vi
I don't like the idea, but, (Score:3, Interesting)
However, I have old full height hard drives from the 5160 days that I can fire up right now and pull data from 20 years later.
CD and DVD has shown's it's miserable failings, I've lost LOTS of CD's that were only a few years old.
It takes a damn long time for the platters in a hermetically sealed HDD to go bad when it's sitting unused in storage.
If they can get them smaller, cheaper and more reliable, I'm on board with this. I just hate to let go of the old ways. I guess some of us suffer the Stockholm Syndrome when it comes to what we've always used and have all our eggs in..
Easy fix for the tapes (Score:5, Informative)
Get an old video recorder, the older the better. You're looking for a seperate motor for each drive, top loader if possible, with a metal deck. Remove the top cover.
Glue two cotton makeup removing pads (the kind *without* moisturiser, just dry cotton pads) or something similar to two pieces of wood. Arrange them so they squeeze the tape gently.
Wind the tape backwards and forwards a few times, and the gunk will get wiped off the tape. If they are really bad, change the pads between each pass. Periodically hoover the mouldy gunk out of the machine.
If there is something really stubborn on the tape, soak two pads in alcohol, arrange a big long drying loop (you may need to remove the head block) with a fan to blow dry it, then two "dry" pads for a final wipe.
This works, and works well.
Re:Easy fix for the tapes (Score:2)
Thanks, I'll try that. I have a LOT of old tapes that I would like to salvage and xfer to something else if at all possible.
Also, Big Lots usually has 4 head stereo VCR's for $29.95 Not bad considering I paid $1,800 for a Curtis Mathis 4h 2ch back in the mid 80's...
Re:Easy fix for the tapes (Score:2)
I certainly hope not (Score:2)
B) Having tapes makes for a nice method of archiving video. Blank DV tapes can run less than $5 a pop in reasonable bulk (six packs or so), which is a pretty small price to pay for a fairly inexpensive archiving system. Granted, it's not super durable compared to data archival tapes, but it's certainly fine for inexpensive storage. I shoo
power (Score:2)
How to do a hard disk camera correctly... (Score:2)
Leave the hard disk out.
That's right no hard disk in the camera unit. Instead either tether it with a heavy-duty, reinforced, industrial-grade firewire link. Or better yet, use something like wi-fi, or the new faster bluetooth or even your own proprietary scheme, to record wirelessly.
That opens up all kinds of flexibility and convenience. If the shooting is all going to be in a confined space o
Re:How to do a hard disk camera correctly... (Score:2)
Re:How to do a hard disk camera correctly... (Score:2)
Happens often in IT that something that fails once is a big success years later. Next time you know tablet PC will be reasonably priced
Microdrive throughput only ~5MBps (Score:2)
Pogue's Added Bonus (Score:2)
I wouldn't use it (Score:2)
Re:I wouldn't use it (Score:2)
Anyways, Beta is still quite alive. Last night I ran a camera for a college hockey game, they used DigiBeta for replays and packages.
Re:I wouldn't use it (Score:2)
thanks but no thanks (Score:2, Informative)
I do a lot of videostuff (documentaries, inane little comedies, etc etc) on a semi-professional basis and this really has no appeal to me.
First off, tapes are very robust. They can take a lot of damage and still be usable. Harddrives are not very robust (at least not in the same way as tape). Also, a camera without replacable storage is in my opinion worthless, especially when
Article read, HD a bad title (Score:2)
Pogue writes that it will not work with Apple's Final Cut Pro or iMovie and that the software that it is sold with (for pee cees only) is really awful. One has to transfer really poorly-named files from the mini-drive. They're poorly-named because they are not dist
My God (Score:2)
These cameras aren't HD.
In fact their quality is lower than that of standard MiniDV camcorders.
DV video is captured at 720x480 (interlaced or progressive depending on the camera, only the high-end ones are progressive) using a variant of Motion JPEG. The compression is pretty light, so the quality is high. DV video from a good camera (good optics and CCD) is slightly better than DVD quality.
This camera records DVD-quality/bitrate MPEG-2 (more compres
Inadmissable! (Score:2)
Bah! (Score:2)
I was hoping more for a AG-DVX 100 3ccd, 24p camera that would accept some form of firewire hard drive to dump video onto, in DV Stream format.
Wait, you can already do that.
This is just a DVD-R camera with microdrives instead of mini dvd-rs. Its small and nifty, and I would carry it with me to shoot quick shots, but I'm going to stick with my DVX 100 for my professional shoots.
HD vs HDD (Score:2)
HD = High Definition, as in 1080i or 720p HDTV.
HDD = Hard Disk Drive.
When talking about a video camera there should be a clear distinction.
Sample video? (Score:2)
Will someone please explain to me, (Score:2)
Recording is a basically sequential activity, and the random-access capability of optical technology is more than adequate for limited use of editing and playback which are done inside a handheld device.
Only if the HD is removable (Score:2, Insightful)
Tape may be a big hassle in many ways, but at least it provides theoretically unlimited storage? A tape fills up? Just pop in a new one! However, if you have a fixed HD, even if it can store many hours of video, eventually you will max out the capacity. There always needs to be room to upgrade the storage.
Think about it: you
an hour? (Score:3, Insightful)
Plus I can gte(just did, in fact) a decent camcorder for 199.99. When you can get these for 199, then analog might be in trouble.
Squish, at $200 a pop.... (Score:2)
Truly, one has to wonder at the product managerment drones who plop (should I say poop?) these things out. MicroDrives are evidently closest in size and appearance to Memory Cards, so use MicroDrives... even though these camcorders are HUGE, and a small media format (and capacity) doesn't make that much sense.
Apple, where are you? Take the average consum
Re:Cool! (Score:4, Informative)
IMO, it is pretty curious that this HD camcorder doesn't use it, as JVC is trying to promote D-VHS, they own the VHS and D-VHS standards.
Re:it show's it has a 4 GB drive? (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, anyone know the lifetime on mini-dv tapes? Is it better than on optical media (dvd-r specifically). I'm trying to decide how best to archive video of my child. DVD is great for watching but I fear that some day I'll pop it in the machine and it will be dead.
Re:Cost is still prohibitive... (Score:2)