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JVC First With A HD-Based Consumer Camcorder

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?"

174 of 229 comments (clear)

  1. Why stop at camcorders? by divide+overflow · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm hoping that tape-based backup units will disappear and be replaced with something faster, cheaper, and more reliable.

    1. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by Kenja · · Score: 3, Interesting
      "I'm hoping that tape-based backup units will disappear and be replaced with something faster, cheaper, and more reliable."

      Given that tapes are cheaper and more reliable then hard drives what are you looking for?

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    2. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by nicholas. · · Score: 1

      What tapes are you using? In my experience with tapes (DDS), I've found them to more expensive than large hard drives. I also question how much more reliable tape is. I get failures all the time.

    3. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Informative

      Is it? That depends. How much is a 500 Gb tape backup system going for nowadays? I have about a thousand gigs of storage on my home network: how much would it cost me to back that up to tape? Sure, the cost per bit of tape is lower than hard disk (although the disparity isn't as great as it used to be) but the barrier to entry is much higher: high-density tape drives aren't cheap. So, from a corporate perspective (where there are substantial IT funds to invest in up-front hardware costs) tape makes a lot of sense: over the life of the drive the savings offered by the use of inexpensive tape are worth it. For small offices and home users a removable hard drive probably makes more sense for backup purposes.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    4. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

      How old is your tape?

      --

      Gorkman

    5. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by divide+overflow · · Score: 1

      > Given that tapes are cheaper and more reliable then hard drives what are you looking for?

      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 bet I'll get my hands on one as quickly as possible.

    6. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by Kenja · · Score: 1

      I use AIT. Been doing so for years now and have not had a single tape fail. Cost per gigabyte is around .50$ when you buy larger quantites of tapes. MTF is claimed to be at 30 years and I have no reason to doubt that claim.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    7. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by nicholas. · · Score: 1

      We have hundreds of DDS4 tapes. We produce about fifteen 20GB tapes a month. We've calculate our failure rate at .05% which we think is unacceptable. We've been seriously evaluating hard drives as an alternative back up. The cost is comparable (sometimes cheaper) and the speed increase would help out a lot too. I just worry about the longevity.

      We've looked at other tape media too (AIT) but we're just weary of tape.

    8. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by aldoman · · Score: 1

      RAID. Either 5 or 1. Depending on your needs, I don't think most people need to store vast amounts of data over 10 years. Sure, you might need to keep accounts for that long but you can easily get something more suitable (high grade CDR or DVDR) that can store it for years.

    9. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by Kenja · · Score: 1

      I run a massive RAID hosted off a NetApp Filer. Drives fail all the time. MTF * the number of drives = high failure rate. If you have bottomless piles of cash to keep buying new drives go for it. However for most people tapes are far better.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    10. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by Stevyn · · Score: 1

      Thousands of gigs? What the hell are you doing?

    11. Re:Why stop at camcorders? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      No, I said "a thousand gigs" not "thousands". And really, 4x250 Gb isn't that much nowadays. I store a lot of my DVDs on my server so I can play them on different computers around the house. Actually inserting a disc into a drive just seems so ... quaint, nowadays.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  2. Oh great. by Kenja · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now on top of everything else I have to deal with I now get to defragment my camcorder.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    1. Re:Oh great. by Zorilla · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The idea that there are filesystems out there that don't fragment is a myth. No matter how file storage is done, there is always a chance for data which needs to be loaded in sequence to be scattered over the disk which would make loading very non-optimal as the disk head would have to move all over the place.

      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.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    2. Re:Oh great. by ip_fired · · Score: 2, Informative

      You should take a look at HFS+ Fragmentation.

      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.

      --
      Don't count your messages before they ACK.
    3. Re:Oh great. by hobo2k · · Score: 1

      No problem. I'll just do that while ScanDisk is fixing my MP3 player.

    4. Re:Oh great. by evilviper · · Score: 4, Informative
      The idea that there are filesystems out there that don't fragment is a myth.

      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 /var, with 0.1% fragmentation.

      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.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  3. No Mac Support? by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems silly beyond belief that these JVC camcorders don't support Macs. Something like this would have wide appeal to the Final Cut Pro crowd...

    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 :)

    --
    There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    1. Re:No Mac Support? by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 1

      using a separate reader and then loading the files off of the hard drive from whatever weird filesystem the camcorder uses and then importing those files into your editing software is a big hassle compared to having it work directly with iMovie or final cut pro.

      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 footage directly as a final cut pro or imovie project. then you could plug in a laptop and edit your movie directly on the camera without taking the time to copy over files until everything is done. just imagine how cool this would be :)

      --
      There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    2. Re:No Mac Support? by tillemetry · · Score: 1

      I love macs, I use macs. But, at least at the time I was trying to do it, they didn't support MP2 "out of the box". I had to buy a quicktime plugin to read MP2 from the mac site for $29.95. There may be a freeware way around this. Maybe someone could suggest one.

      Macintosh users would expect instant compatability with iMovie. Imovie works with DV. Doesn't work with MP2 - at least when I tried it. Maybe in Tiger?

      My guess is that if you had the Quicktime plugin, Quicktime would read the MP2 files without a problem. Writing them to quicktime may be another story entirely - with sound anyway.

      I know this is slashdot and I will be corrected if I am in error. Please try to keep it polite. Thanks.

    3. Re:No Mac Support? by Basehart · · Score: 1

      "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 :)"

      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!

    4. Re:No Mac Support? by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      You can import any file for which you have a QuickTime codec on your Mac into iMovie, but iMovie will convert it to a DV stream on import.

      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.

      --

      I write in my journal
    5. Re:No Mac Support? by captaineo · · Score: 1

      I don't have any inside information, but it looks very likely that the next Final Cut release will have some kind of support for MPEG-2 HD camcorders.

    6. Re:No Mac Support? by DJStealth · · Score: 1

      It would also be nice to have decent Progressive Scan support. I'm not sure if 720i is considered High definition. 720p is though.

      320p is definitely not high def.

  4. Cool! by MeatBlast · · Score: 1

    Awesome, tapes are a hassle. It's a lot easier t use digital memory. Hope it's not too expensive (although I know it will be).

    1. Re:Cool! by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 3, Informative

      A D-VHS tape can store about 44 gigabytes. You don't want to know how much money it costs to do that in solid state memory. It looks like the D5 tape standard uses 140GB/hour.

      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.

  5. too small by WormholeFiend · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The hard drive is too small for me.

    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.

    1. Re:too small by jason.hall · · Score: 1

      That's what I was thinking. If I want to record more than an hour at best (only) quality with my DV camcorder, I bring along another tape at about $7/ea. If I want more than an hour at best quality with this thing (like at an event), I either need to lug along something to dump it to, or shell out another $200 for a second 4GB microdrive (and hope I don't need a third)...

    2. Re:too small by dknj · · Score: 1

      And this comes from someone who doesn't have a minidv camera... The current crop of mini-dv tapes hold roughly 10gb of data. 120gb is a big step from mini-dv.

      -dk

    3. Re:too small by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 3, Funny
      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.

      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.

  6. The article misses the point by cale · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As is so common in mainstream tech writing, the article completely misses the point. They claim that because the camera can use microdrives (compact flash based hard drives) that it is somehow comparable to the ipod. I don't usually consider 4gb equivalent to 40 gb , 60 gb, or whatever the ipod (and other high cap music players) max capacity is now.

    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?

    1. Re:The article misses the point by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      NO NO NO! MPEG2=COMPRESSED I want raw DV video like my tape based camcorder already uses. That and I personally have no issues with tape being reliable. I guess it all depends on how you treat your tapes. If you constantly finger them or if you just stuff em in your pocket sans case, you WILL have problems. If you always put them back in their case and treat them as if they had your memories on them (Oh wait, they do....), then you should have zero problems.

      --

      Gorkman

    2. Re:The article misses the point by karnal · · Score: 2, Interesting

      " NO NO NO! MPEG2=COMPRESSED"

      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 than those that buy tape or uncompressed solutions, then guess what they (the manufacturers) will make more of?

      Also, I'm sure with a big enough hard drive, you could do uncompressed -- kind of like the higher end digital cameras. Obviously your time to record would go down, but again, a solution for everyone.

      --
      Karnal
    3. Re:The article misses the point by farnz · · Score: 2, Informative

      DV is compressed, too. MPEG-2 I-frame only is the same type of video compression as DV uses, just in a different wrapper.

    4. Re:The article misses the point by kzinti · · Score: 1

      Yup. At DV quality, a 60GB drive would hold over four hours of video.

      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, and I rarely need to shoot more than an hour at a stretch, so I could always dump the camcorder to the laptop, then go back to shooting.

      That said, a bigger 60GB drive would be great to have, and I guess the option to drop down to DVD quality might be nice to have for certain occasions.

    5. Re:The article misses the point by donglekey · · Score: 1

      DVD is higher quality than DV, but it still takes up less space. DV takes alot less computation to encode and decode and has a more consistent data rate and does what it was meant for decently, but MPEG2 or MPEG4 could be stored at a higher resolution for the same data rate and would look dramatically better.

    6. Re:The article misses the point by kzinti · · Score: 2, Informative

      DVD is higher quality than DV

      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 the intermediate frames.

      At a given bit rate, and with the kind of electronics in a camera, DV is going to be higher quality and simpler to produce.

      DV has a post-processing advantage over DVD in that, because it's I-frames only, it's easier to edit in a program like Premier.

      MPEG2 or MPEG4 could be stored at a higher resolution for the same data rate and would look dramatically better.

      DV and DVD both use the same resolution, 720x480. As for data rates, you just can't compare DV and DVD. DV operates at a higher data rate than DVD was ever intended to. Contrariwise, DV can't realistically operate at the low data rates of DVD. DVD and DV operate at different ends of a data-rate vs compute-power tradeoff.

      At their best data rates - DV's typical 25 megabit per second, vs DVD's max MPEG-2 rate of about 9 megabit, their quality is comparable, and very very good. I find that DV always looks better than MPEG-2 at DVD specs, but DVD can get very close.

    7. Re:The article misses the point by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "DV is compressed, too. MPEG-2 I-frame only is the same type of video compression as DV uses, just in a different wrapper." ... and a different bit-rate. (You care about this most when you're green-screening.)

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    8. Re:The article misses the point by farnz · · Score: 2, Informative

      MPEG-2 I-frame only has no defined bitrate to it; it can be 25MBit/s (which leaves the quality identical to DV), 50MBit/s (identical picture quality to DVCPro) or higher. DV is normally run at some multiple of 25MBit/s (so DV is 25MBit/s, DVCPro is DV at 50MBit/s etc).

    9. Re:The article misses the point by donglekey · · Score: 1

      DV and DVD both use the same resolution, 720x480. As for data rates, you just can't compare DV and DVD. DV operates at a higher data rate than DVD was ever intended to. Contrariwise, DV can't realistically operate at the low data rates of DVD. DVD and DV operate at different ends of a data-rate vs compute-power tradeoff.

      DVD is just MPEG2 of course, and if a video camera was just creating files on a hard drive they could be any resolution or data rate they needed to be. The issue is that a camera without a tape is not limited to a specific format, data rate, or resolution, and MPEG2 or MPEG4 would look alot better. They would need to go through conversion for editing, but you could avoid the fact that DV's red and blue channels are much lower resolution than the green (when looking at it in RGB colorspace) so the best that DV has to offer doesn't stand up to MPEG2 at the same datarate, and with the tape out of the way, processor speed and cost is the only hurdle to getting better video.

    10. Re:The article misses the point by evilviper · · Score: 1
      DV is higher quality because it's not compressed as much. DV is like MPEG-2 with I-frames only.

      I-frame-only encoding results in a higher bitrate, but certainly not higher quality.

      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 the intermediate frames.

      Not true. There are many real-time MPEG-2 encoders that are quite high quality, while inexpensive.

      DV has a post-processing advantage over DVD in that, because it's I-frames only, it's easier to edit in a program like Premier.

      Reconstructing I-frames is not a very difficult or CPU-intensive process. I can't speak for Premiere, but the only difference should be behind-the-scenes, and unnoticable to you.

      I find that DV always looks better than MPEG-2 at DVD specs

      Then you aren't using a halfway decent MPEG-2 encoder. Not surprising.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    11. Re:The article misses the point by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      You cannot edit mpeg2/4 easily especially with large spans between keyframes, DV format is fine, it works on tapes, just use it on HD.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  7. Death to tape/optical by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    Yea!

    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.

    1. Re:Death to tape/optical by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      Well it helps to read the article. CF2 will do nicely, though I'd rather see a larger laptop drive in the thing, or if they are going to bother with "flash memory" use either SD or CF1 instead of CF2 so I don't have to go out and buy even more types of memory.

      Also why no MPEG-4? MPEG-2 is so 90's

    2. Re:Death to tape/optical by Zorilla · · Score: 1

      There is none because MPEG-4 is intended for lower bitrate video. It hinders the image more at higher bitrates. With MPEG-2, you get good quality video at 5 Mbits/sec for 2 hours and excellent quality video at 9.8 Mbits/sec for 1 hour on a single-layer DVD's worth of space.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    3. Re:Death to tape/optical by afidel · · Score: 1

      What I don't understand is why they don't use a PC Card type 3 slot. That way you could use whatever memory technology you wanted with simple, cheap adapters. You could use 1.8" HDD's, CF cards including microdrives, SD, etc. The reason for not doing MPEG-4 is that it is more expensive to do in hardware and more expensive to process in software, then again on a $1,000 camcorder that's kind of a lame excuse =)

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  8. www.jvc.com connection refused after 9 comments !! by maharg · · Score: 4, Funny

    - is this a record ?

    --

    $ strings FTP.EXE | grep Copyright
    @(#) Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.
  9. Wow... by doormat · · Score: 1

    This is impressive, its also a 2MP camera as well. It can record video to CF (high speed), SD and microdrive. Damn, I want 10GB microdrives... 2+hrs in 8.5mbit/s MPEG2. Its a shame its not a HD-based HiDef camera... I'm sure it wont be too far away.

    --
    The Doormat

    If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
    1. Re:Wow... by maharg · · Score: 1

      it's pretty cool. I can't wait (read "I will wait") until these things do H.264/AVC (MPEG-4 Part 10) instead of MPEG-2. H.264 uses about 40% of the bitrate to record video at the "same" quality, compared to MPEG-2. That will be killer.

      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.htm

      --

      $ strings FTP.EXE | grep Copyright
      @(#) Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.
    2. Re:Wow... by modecx · · Score: 1

      Its a shame its not a HD-based HiDef camera

      I, for one, am GLAD that it's not a hi-def camera. Watching home videos is bad enough, but watching stupid, ugly and fat people (my family [or anyone else's for that matter!]) on a jerky-ass high definition home video would be a hundred times worse. Where they had double chins and blemishes before, you could see the mini-Mt. Rushmore my uncle's moles have decided to sculpt, and poor Cousin Susie's zit would look like Olympus Mons. Decidedly NOT something I wish to experience!

      On the other hand, it would be great to watch some oaf get his nuts creamed by his son, after he foolishly decides to let the tyke practice with his golf clubs on America's Funnies Home Videos... [movie announcer voice]IN HIGH DEFINITIONNNNNNN, WITH DOLBBBBY DIGITALLLL SURROUND SOUNNNNNND!!![/voice]

      --
      Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
    3. Re:Wow... by ethanms · · Score: 1

      does anyone have a real world example of the videos taken by these cameras (the cheap Mustek MPEG-4 ones)? Including audio hopefully...

      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.

  10. Only if the disk is easily replaceable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The problem with a harddrive based solution is that most people want replaceable media in a film (as well as photo) cameras.

    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!

  11. Acronym Collision!!! by jhealy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Oh No!
    HD = Hard Drive
    HD = High Definition

    Confusion in future Slashdot articles = imminent

  12. ...and another thing by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I gotta keep complaining about how much JVC just doesn't get it. I've been waiting forever for a HD camcorder, but this thing is a dog. Why would anyone want to edit video on a camcorder? The camcorder should concentrate on being a camcorder and leave the editing up to laptops. Keep it simple and elegant and eliminate all of the little thumb buttons and crazy menus within menus within menus that makes most digital camcorders and cameras such a drag to use.

    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.

    --
    There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    1. Re:...and another thing by karnal · · Score: 1

      Speaking of viewfinders, I've noticed that a lot of the more inexpensive cameras (last time I looked, about 6 months ago) have a very large annoyance...

      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 panel. Leave the panel to ditial cameras.

      --
      Karnal
    2. Re:...and another thing by goon+america · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For over a grand, I'd expect more thought put into how a camcorder is actually USED.

      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, instead they try to pump up or rachet down various specs in an attempt to try to fool the customer into thinking that these will translate into a better usage experience. Get some quick short-run profits and try not to worry about what's going to happen to the brand in the long term. Happy sailing!

    3. Re:...and another thing by sahonen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      $15,000 cameras have B&W viewfinders. Makes it easier to focus, actually.

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    4. Re:...and another thing by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Some professional and "pro-sumer" (ugh) cameras have black-and-white viewfinders. The Canon XL-1 and derivatives has a color viewfinder. No idea why; they just do, I think.

      --

      I write in my journal
    5. Re:...and another thing by sahonen · · Score: 1

      I shoot a fishing show with an XL1. The color viewfinder is actually pretty handy when you're the only crew there and you want to know what colors you're shooting without hooking up an external monitor. Especially since said monitor doesn't have any power because you're in the middle of a lake. But a B&W viewfinder really is better in most other cases, especially when you've got an entire production chain above you who are working on your colors for you. It's just a ton easier to focus.

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    6. Re:...and another thing by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      you want to know what colors you're shooting without hooking up an external monitor

      I'm so sorry to hear that you've only got one eye. How'd you lose the other one?

      (I kid, I kid.)

      --

      I write in my journal
    7. Re:...and another thing by sahonen · · Score: 1

      Well, anyone who's shooting something with an XL1 probably doesn't have enough money to buy an external monitor, either. At least not one calibrated well enough to actually judge your colors on it.

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      Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
    8. Re:...and another thing by jbplou · · Score: 1

      They aren't the only one who pack editingfeatures in on the camcorder. Look at sony, hitachi, canon ... etc mini dv camcorders they all have editing features as well.

    9. Re:...and another thing by tonsofpcs · · Score: 1

      Calibrating a CRT-based monitor isn't too hard. All you need is a monitor that has the same inputs as your source has outputs AND manual controls [brightness, contrast, phase/hue, color/saturation], a way to generate color bars (SMPTE or EIA are best, but anything with the bars and PLUGE will work) an eye (or two).

    10. Re:...and another thing by sahonen · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't trust it myself... Even if you can get the colors "pretty close" by eyeball, there's so many factors that can throw it off. The XL1 does have a handy color bar generator, though.

      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 cameras in the sports truck, so he's setting it all up. The colors look funny. So he *adjusts the monitors.* I so want to fire the guy, but I can't.

      --
      Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
    11. Re:...and another thing by log0n · · Score: 1

      Professionals (and anyone interested in video more than just the 'lets tape xmas' crowd) prefer black and white viewfinders because it makes it simple easy to check overexposure, focus, white balance, a whole host of other overall good broadcast picture related things quickly.

    12. Re:...and another thing by lifebouy · · Score: 1

      I hate it right off the bat because it's too damn small. In a camcorder, I want something meaty. I have to be able to feel the thing in my hands. On the body of this camcorder, which needs to be at least as big as both my fists put together, I want a zoom-in, a zoom-out, a record/pause button, and a stop button. I want an eyepiece. LCD is fine, and all the extra buttonry can be hidden under it, no problem. But an eyepiece is a must. I'm hating just about every digital camcorder I've seen. 4 gigs of HD? bump that up to 30 and you've got something. slap a laptop drive in there. It needs the extra weight. Otherwise stay with the tapes. These camcorders nowadays must be designed by chimps. I want the casing to be damn near indestructable. Put some metal in it. I should be able to use the thing as a football, and afterwards the only thing that might need replacing is the hard drive. It ought to be water resistant. It might seem counter-intuitive for a manufacturer to actually put out quality, but the more people love your camcorder, the more you SELL. You want it to be cool to carry one around. You don't want people to be afraid to breath on them for fear of cracking the plastic shell. Wake up, O ye manufacturers of crappy camcorders.

      --
      Drop me a line at:
      Key ID: 0x54D1D809
    13. Re:...and another thing by tonsofpcs · · Score: 1

      Why did that get posted anonymously? I set it to No Karma Bonus, not anon. Anyway, color bars are your friend, use them, trust them, and when they're wrong, they're right until you try matching them up with bars from another source.

  13. No,not so soon by muditgarg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Are Tape-based camcorders going to die out soon"

    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)

    1. Re:No,not so soon by cot · · Score: 1

      "Hard drive based have a disadvantage as there is no way to increase the offered storage space"

      RTFA

      Better yet, they record onto removable hard drives. These camcorders accept standard MicroDrives, which look just like the Compact Flash memory cards in many digital cameras but actually contain hard drives

      Even if a manufacturer decided to use the ipod style mini HDs, there's no reason they couldn't make a tray that would let you swap them out. It works for regular 3.5" IDE drives, why not the smaller ones?

      --

  14. Re:it show's it has a 4 GB drive? by ThatsNotFunny · · Score: 1

    Not knowing how to circumvent free regs is no excuse for not RTFA.

    That having been said, they use removable microdrives that could theoretically be replaced when one fills up.

    They're about $200 a pop, though. For that price, you could get about 50 Mini-DV tapes (at retail, no less. If you're going to get that many, you could probably buy in bulk and get even more)

    --
    "Was it a millionaire who said 'Imagine No Posessions?'" -- Elvis Costello
  15. first? by oneishy · · Score: 3, Informative

    How is JVC first when i spotted my eye on this 4MP Sanyo 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?

    1. Re:first? by cot · · Score: 2, Informative

      "21 minutes of video recording with 512MB SD memory card at 640x480 "

      SD would be a funny acronym to use for a hard drive, particularly since secure digital memory cards already use it.

      --

    2. Re:first? by tattoi.nobori · · Score: 2, Funny
      How is JVC first when i spotted my eye on this 4MP Sanyo several months ago!

      Gee, that must have hurt! Is it still there?

    3. Re:first? by bill_of_wrongs · · Score: 1

      The Sanyo uses SD cards instead of compact flash. There are no hard discs in SD format (way too small at the moment at least) and the capacity is much less. I wonder how long it will take the manufacturers to come up with the correct solution: Just stick an ordinary 2.5 inch laptop HD in the damn thing. MUCH better space/price ratio than microdrives yet still smaller than the tapes and the required mechanics in miniDV cams.

    4. Re:first? by oneishy · · Score: 2, Informative

      The JVC can also use SD or CF (it has slots for both) in place of a Hard Drive, so they really are in the same group when it comes to non-tape storage. The JVC may also offer HD as storage medium, but does that really matter when you are claiming to be the first non-tape?

  16. couldn't read it but... by rel4x · · Score: 1

    The article is slashdotted, so I can't read it. I will however say that I hope to see camcorders moving in the way of things like those handy USB thumb drives. 512mb, providing it records to an AVI file (gotta love the gorgeous compression), can record quite a bit of video/audio. I think we'll have to wait a bit though before prices are low enough. I REALLY hope this article wasn't an attempt to get the whole minidisc thing going again. That would make me cry.
    Anyways, I repeat, I COULD NOT read the article, so this is all just random thoughts. (Oh how the moderation will burn)

    --

    Before you mod me funny, think, perhaps I was insightfully funny?
    1. Re:couldn't read it but... by kamesh · · Score: 1

      Check the story at IHT http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/11/26/business/pt pogue.html

  17. Re:it show's it has a 4 GB drive? by malfunct · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A tape is like $4, find me 4GB hd's for that price and I'll carry a few.

    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.

    --

    "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

  18. read the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    As is so common in mainstream tech writing, the article completely misses the point. They claim that because the camera can use microdrives (compact flash based hard drives) that it is somehow comparable to the ipod. I don't usually consider 4gb equivalent to 40 gb , 60 gb, or whatever the ipod (and other high cap music players) max capacity is now.


    it's comparable to the ipod mini

    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.

    gee... the author says the same thing... right at the top of the article he talks about how much video a 60 GB iPod could hold.

    It's amazing that you can conclude the article misses the point, when you clearly haven't read it.

    1. Re:read the article by cale · · Score: 1

      I read the article when it came out in the times earlier this week.

      They point out that it is nothing like the ipod and then continue to say how it has an internal hard drive. I could just as well put a 4 gig compact flash card in there. The point of the leader was that this was some sort of hard drive based video camera. It isn't, it simply uses compact flash. Whoop dee doo

  19. Holly Granola by roman_mir · · Score: 2, Interesting

    JVC.COM is slashdotted!

    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.

    1. Re:Holly Granola by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      so this may not become as ubiquitous as HDs in MP3 players

      But do you still see people with cassette based walkmans, or has everyone now gone "digital"?

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:Holly Granola by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I don't know, haven't seen those in a while. Really.

  20. Tapes gone? by October_30th · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The days of storing computer data, music collections and Hollywood movies on spools of tape will soon be completely gone

    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".

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
    1. Re:Tapes gone? by cot · · Score: 2

      WTF are you talking about? Copying the data onto spare hard drives IS backing it up. Particularly if the backup hard drive setup is a RAID.

      --

    2. Re:Tapes gone? by October_30th · · Score: 1
      Copying the data onto spare hard drives IS backing it up.

      Never dropped your computer from a height?

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    3. Re:Tapes gone? by redivider · · Score: 1

      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.

      You meant 500+ GB right?

      You could back up 500MB to a CD.

      --
      Sinch
    4. Re:Tapes gone? by cot · · Score: 1

      It sure as hell isn't backing up if you keep the backup drives in the same PC as the original data! Your backup tapes wont be protecting you from fire/theft/flood/etc if you leave the tapes in the same machine you're supposedly backing up!

      There's just one word for that. Idiocy.

      You put the backup drives in another box in another place (preferably another building)

      --

    5. Re:Tapes gone? by October_30th · · Score: 1
      You put the backup drives in another box in another place (preferably another building)

      There's a slight difference in effort between cycling drives and cycling tapes.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    6. Re:Tapes gone? by cot · · Score: 1

      Exactly. With all the drives connected to one old PC, you don't have to cycle anything, while cycling tapes is a pain in the ass.

      That's what you were getting at, right?

      --

    7. Re:Tapes gone? by October_30th · · Score: 1
      "One old PC" in another building is mighty fine if you can afford that other building and the bandwidth to transfer hundreds of megabytes every night (or are you actually advocating the use of incremental/differential backups **shudder**?).

      Having the "one old PC" in the same room with the computer you're backing up is just pointless. If your place burns down or is robbed, both of them will be gone regardless of all the fancy RAID arrays you might have set up.

      It's much easier to cycle tapes. Cycle tapes and take the latest tape to work with you, for instance. What I guess I was getting at in my original post was that there aren't tapes with enough capacity. Instead of relying on rigged solutions like "remote backups on some old PC", more emphasis should be placed on developing tapes with more capacity. Tapes are not obsolete.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    8. Re:Tapes gone? by NitroWolf · · Score: 1

      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.

      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

      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

      Keep this hush hush though... this technology is bleeding edge and if there's a lot of people using these, the RIAA might get wind of it and start sueing people. It would be ugly. The MPAA might get involved in the second link's hardware as well.

      So keep it on the DL brother, but I feel your backup pain. 500MB is a lot of Metal AE downloads.

    9. Re:Tapes gone? by biglig2 · · Score: 1

      Yes, it takes me about a minute to eject the magazine from my expensive tape autochanger, whereas my $20 removeable disk caddy pops out in about 10 seconds. ;-)

      --
      ~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
  21. Costs by fozzmeister · · Score: 1

    You can get a massive HDD for 40-60 quid, a "Sony" (or other vendor) tape will probably cost you 10-20 which you will probably have 3 of, but many will have more. I think many manufacturers will look at this and notice that they will make more money out of selling tapes.

  22. Hold onto your old Camcorders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Between DRM and Wireless "Censor Chips"(*), the old tape may be of more utility for some time to come!

    * - A feature where wireless signals from the Police, Army, etc. will tell advanced Camcorders to stop recording! It will be touted as a way to increase privacy, but can also ensure governments protect their dirty work from being recorded!

  23. Tape will die...slowly by kiljoy001 · · Score: 1

    If anything I would think that tape based recorders will die... very slowly. There are certain advantages to each storage medium, I would hate to drop a camcorder with a hard drive in it (you don't want to drop one period) but with a harddrive you run the risk of loosing everything, the data AND the equipment, just something that comes to mind.

  24. The hard drive needs to be removable... by alchemist68 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    The hard drive needs to be removable like a cartridge with a FireWire 800 port on it so the content can be downloaded into a computer. With HD sizes getting smaller and smaller (I recently purchased a 40GB Apple iPod), it wouldn't be too far of a stretch to simply be able to swipe-in and out hard drives as they are needed. Having a removabnle cartridge hard drive also frees the camera to still record instead of downloading into iMovie as I have done with my friend's digital camcorder. Now, ALL of the camcorder manufacturers should get together and standardize on the physical size of the cartridge hard drives so they are not vendor specific; these would be analogous to 35mm film canisters.

  25. Well, a hard disk could be useful by Z00L00K · · Score: 1
    But for (insert your favourite suitable word here) sake I hope that they try to find something better than FAT as a filesystem. Something more modern like EXT3 or ReiserFS would be a lot better.

    I would actually wait to buy one until there are HDTV camcorders around for a reasonable price.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  26. HD-based portable video-corders.... by commo1 · · Score: 3, Funny

    DO NOT let George Lucas NEAR the things.

    1. Re:HD-based portable video-corders.... by Bake · · Score: 1

      If he'll have his way, then it won't be long before all the harddrives will come with a preloaded filter which automatically inserts Ewoks in all filmed scenes!

  27. Aiptek CF Digital Cam(era)corders by ebooher · · Score: 1

    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 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 video and audio on a 512 MB CF.

    Ok, so it's no MPEG2 CCD wonder wiz. It's recording directly to MPEG4, in a size that is half of TV, I think. 320 x something if memory serves, and it isn't even a full 30 (ok 29.97) frames per second. But we were blessed last year with a new daughter and she keeps saying "Oh, I wish we had a camcorder ..." etc, etc. So it will get the job done.

    The fact that you can buy a camera that is also a camcorder, regardless of quality, that can capture a full two hours worth of video and sound, direct to CF which on my Mac and a USB dongle shows up as a hard drive, so I can manipulate the CF files directly, no fuss, no muss. Can a tape format that doesn't allow fast and easy movement between formats, devices, TV's, cameras, computers, etc, ad nauseam really be viable for much longer?

    My parents own a really nice JVC VHS-C camcorder. Does all sorts of things. I think you can buy the same model right now for just under $300 US. But I don't even own a VCR, everything in my house is digital. DVD, House wired for Ethernet, computers in every room, all CD's bought instantly get put into iTunes, most new music being bought is from iTMS (iTunes Music Store) and I'm right now working out a way to put all my families movies into a MythTV style server repository along with a Microsoft-esque Digital TV Set top box in each room so we can "On Demand" every movie we own.

    --
    "Genius may shine aloof and alone, like a star, but goodness is social, and it takes two men and God to make a Brother."
  28. I don't like the idea, but, by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have video tapes that are 10-15 years old and many have a white mildew on them, most are otherwise bad now, they will ruin the heads of any VCR you put them in. Gone forever.

    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..

  29. Re:500+ MB worth of results by zmollusc · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Wow, tricky one! I can see dee problem. Can anyone see dee solution. Is the total less than 700 MB?

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  30. I certainly hope not by UserChrisCanter4 · · Score: 1

    A) These camcorders use 4GB microdrives to shoot MPEG-2 video. The only reason they're doing this is for the size. MPEG-2 is inferior to DV for almost every scenario.

    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 shoot my video on DV, edit, then dump back out to another two DV Tapes with the finished product (always have two copies...).

    C) JVC, while not lousy, frequently loses in comparisons with Canon or Sony DV Cams. I won't be surprised if that's the same with this camera.

    It's not the HDDs are bad ideas, but JVC is using this unit to market based on the size advantage, and nothing else. I don't doubt that there's a definite market for those people who just want a tiny camcorder, but I don't think that this camcorder in any way marks the beginning of the end for tape-based camcorders.

    1. Re:I certainly hope not by bigdavex · · Score: 1

      A) These camcorders use 4GB microdrives to shoot MPEG-2 video. The only reason they're doing this is for the size. MPEG-2 is inferior to DV for almost every scenario.

      Yeah, DV is a much better compression technique, except when you're trying to make things smaller.
      --
      -Dave
    2. Re:I certainly hope not by UserChrisCanter4 · · Score: 1

      Right, which is why you use it for a final copy. Because MPEG-2 compresses based on the frames before and after a given frame, though, it makes video quality progressively worse each time you edit. You want to shoot in DV, edit in DV, then compress to MPEG-2 or -4.

      The story asked if tape-based players would be going away, and I expressed my sincere hope that they never would, then backed it up with a fairly good reason. Canon and Sony have both produced absolutely miniscule camcorders based on DV tapes, so it's not as though there's a huge amount gained by dropping to a CF-sized card, which is probably only 1/4 the size of the already tiny DV tape. Miniaturization is a good thing, but JVC is focusing on the wrong part. Additionally, while smaller camcorders might initially seem appealing, they also exaggerate every movement of the hand that much more, and it's difficult to operate them while filming (smaller buttons that have to be located in weird areas, etc.)

  31. 500+GB, ok? by October_30th · · Score: 1

    Ok. I deserved that.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
    1. Re:500+GB, ok? by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      Heh! I guessed you meant gig but I couldn't resist.
      Ah, back in the day, you could copy half a dozen hard disks onto one $10 removable medium. Those were simpler, happier times (once you had sorted the aspi out).

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  32. power by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

    Does anybody know how the power requirements of running a hard drive compare to those of running a tape spooler?

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
  33. How to do a hard disk camera correctly... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    To all the pro-sumer video camera manufacturers out there, here is how to make a good hard disk based camera:

    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 of say, 30' then the disk can just sit on a table in the same room. Same thing if you are shooting from a car, just sit in on the floor by itself. If you need to move around a lot and cover a lot of ground, you can clip it to your belt or stick in in a backpack, or even designate your an assistant to carry it for the camera-man.

    Also, by decoupling it from the camera we can use those new, big honking 400GB disks (or next years big honking 600GB disks) without having to worry that the camera now ways 5 lbs for disk and the battery to power it.

    Next up - wireless viewfinders. Come out with a pair of glasses where one lens is actually a display that shows what the camera is recording - you will no longer need to hold the camera up to your face to know what you are shooting. You could even film around corners without much trouble. The great thing about this is that the same exact datastream going to the hard disk could be used by the wireless viewfinder too, so no extra work engineering work on the camera side to add this functionality.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    1. Re:How to do a hard disk camera correctly... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      PS, if by some amazing coincidence all these ideas aren't yet patented, consider the parent post to be prior art which I am giving away for free to any and all.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    2. Re:How to do a hard disk camera correctly... by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      Separate camera/VCR units were common in the early days of consumer units. Manufacturers moved away from them, presumably because they believed that consumers saw them as cumbersome. I think that belief is correct. They won't be moving back to a tethered model. (For "prosumer" or professional equipment, sure; but I don't think it's ever gone away in those sectors.) A wireless model might do better, but I think the manufacturers will still see one integrated unit as more convenient than two, for the average consumer.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    3. Re:How to do a hard disk camera correctly... by muyuubyou · · Score: 1

      But now there is technology to make that both cheap and useful; in particular, there is cheap multi-megabyte wireless transmission tech, and excelent video compression algorithms already implemented in hardware.

      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 ;).

    4. Re:How to do a hard disk camera correctly... by j-stroy · · Score: 1

      I also have envisioned these natural divisions of hardware. CCD/Lens system, Storage (HDD, Flash, and tape), Viewfinder Display, network comm.

      By standardizing a bus and physical attachment method, you could stack the items together that you need. (like lego tm)

      PC's proliferated by this design mode. So a PDA + HDD + ccd & lens = camera and so on. Add a DV tape drive when needed, etc. wirelessly connected glasses or PDA viewfinder are fine because viewfinder resolution is lower than recorded resolution.

      Too bad for lack of vision in real usablity from gadget vendors! They should play with "Bey Blades" to see modularity in action.

      Tethers and belt packs are fine. I use a JVC High-Def camcorder which tires my arm out, can't wait to offload tape and battery, etc. to a belt or bag.

      The small cameras are hard to stabilize tho, no inertia.. I expect to see micro steady-cam systems as weights diminish.

      I have a STACK of dv tape around since editting lags behind shooting. dv tape has great capacity per $. maybe next gen DVD's will be a good solution, but considering the compress time, i'd rather stripe to tape raw while the battery recharges.

  34. Cost is still prohibitive... by dfm3 · · Score: 1

    From TFA:

    A four-gigabyte MicroDrive comes in the box and holds one hour of best-quality video. Another four-gigabyte card will set you back about $200. Of course, you can also buy smaller, less expensive MicroDrives.

    As far as cost per byte, micro drives are one of the most expensive hard drives availible. One hour of video is fine for a soccer game or birthday party, but what about that that week-long vacation? Even after deleting unwanted scenes, it's easy to amass more than an hour's worth of footage. I don't use tapes for long-term storage anyway; we have several tapes that, after recording, are backed up onto hard drive and burned to DVD. $200 per hour of video when you are without easy access to a computer for several days can get prohibitive quickly. Now, stick a 60 or 80MB 2.5" drive in there, and we'll talk...

    1. Re:Cost is still prohibitive... by muyuubyou · · Score: 1

      Here in Europe "soccer" games last 90 min + injury times (around 100 min which is 1.66 hours).

  35. digital storage does not last by EllynGeek · · Score: 1

    If you want reliable archiving for more than 3-5 years, digital ain't going to do it. CDs don't last. DVDs don't last. Until a storage medium is developed that will last 100 years or more like old photographs and documents, forget it.

    --

    we will end no whine before its time

    1. Re:digital storage does not last by kamesh · · Score: 1

      Wait till Solid State Disks take off in few years from now!!

    2. Re:digital storage does not last by kamesh · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward, don't get all piffy...just fyi..I did Master's Thesis entitled "Application of Metal Nanocrystals for Low Power Nonvolatile Memory Device"

  36. Re:RTFA by kamesh · · Score: 1

    No. It is a 4GB Microdrive...per JVC, the Microdrive® is compatible with a wide variety of devices that accept CompactFlash+ Type II and PC Card Type II media.

  37. Samsung's had one before... by qcubed · · Score: 1

    in 2003.
    http://www.samsung.com/Products/Camcorder/DigitalG adget/Camcorder_DigitalGadget_ITCAM_7.htm
    http://www.samsung.com/Products/Camcorder/DigitalG adget/Camcorder_DigitalGadget_ITCAM_9.htm
    i don't think i've ever seen them on sale, so they might not be for the "consumer", per se, but they've been out there.

  38. Camcorders like this show the usefulness of tape. by i41Overlord · · Score: 1

    While this is certainly something different, I think its limitations show the usefulness of tape. I don't think it's the future of camcorders.

    This uses a 4 GB hard drive. A MiniDV tape holds about 25 GB. As such, this hard drive based camcorder needs to use lossy compression in order to give it a good recording time. While the picture quality won't be that bad, it's not going to be as good as raw video that MiniDV stores.

    In addition, once this drive is filled up you're kind of out of luck unless you have a PC to upload the data to or you purchase additional microdrive cards, which are expensive. With the MiniDV camcorder you simply put a new tape in, and MiniDV tapes are cheap so most people usually carry around packs of spare tapes. For $10 I can get a couple of tapes. You're not going to get a 4 GB microdrive for $10, and certainly not a 25 GB microdrive.

    So while this camcorder is viewed as something neat because it is different, it's not exactly revolutionary since it's of limited use. I think if hard drive based camcorders were the norm and someone came out with a new design that used cheap tapes which held 6x the data, such a design would be viewed as revolutionary.

  39. Microdrive throughput only ~5MBps by PornMaster · · Score: 1

    At about 5 megabytes a second, dumping 4GB of data off it will take about 13 minutes... so dumping to laptop won't exactly be ideal if you need to keep going... you're going to have to buy a spare Microdrive if you don't want to be stuck idle while offloading data.

  40. Pogue's Added Bonus by ctwxman · · Score: 1

    I read this review a few days ago and was impressed by David Pogue's video review http://www.nytimes.com/videopages/2004/11/25/techn ology/20041125_STAT_VIDEO.htmlof the camcorder, shot and edited on his way to Ohio to visit his parents. The lines between old line print media and electronic journalism continue to blur - though in a good way here.

  41. Re:Camcorders like this show the usefulness of tap by kamesh · · Score: 1

    This certainly looks to be a begining of a trend...wait till Apple comes up with a hip looking camcorder and HD based camcorders will become the trend...remember iPOD.

  42. Is it just me.... by hom · · Score: 1

    or does the commercial on the link show a guy with gargantuan hand?

  43. I wouldn't use it by sahonen · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I work in television. Based on my experience wtih hard drive recorders, they're horribly buggy. They crash all the time, sometimes freeze in the middle of playback, especially when the hard drive starts getting full. For something mission critical, I'd rather record to tape.

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    1. Re:I wouldn't use it by mustardayonnaise · · Score: 1

      As do I (reality television editor), and I have to second this. HD recording is a long way off. I work on a very successful, well-known and highly-watched show and they're still using BetaSP (although they're finally upgrading to IMX now).

      What annoys me about all the newest crop of consumer camcorders is that they are adding features that actually aren't improving video quality, but instead slightly downgrading it. The slow movement away from MiniDV to Mpeg-2 represents a drastic cut in bandwidth and makes editing your footage a pain in the ass. And when it comes to camcorders, smaller is rarely- if ever- better. There is NO SUBSTITUTE for a big CCD (3 x 2/3") and good glass (a high-quality Fujinon lens, for example).

    2. Re:I wouldn't use it by sahonen · · Score: 1

      I don't believe I've heard of IMX. Care to enlighten? As far as I can tell from a quick google, it's an MPEG video stream on a Beta casette? I thought everybody was moving to DVCPro nowadays. Around here, as far as I've seen, everyone uses either Beta or DVCPro.

      Anyways, Beta is still quite alive. Last night I ran a camera for a college hockey game, they used DigiBeta for replays and packages.

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    3. Re:I wouldn't use it by sahonen · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I've never had a problem with DVCPro myself. Never noticed any quality issues even after a couple generations, never broke a tape or a deck. I used a DVCPro deck for instant replay for sports for a while and I'll tell you it was one heck of a lot more reliable than the Omega deck they replaced it with. God, Omegas are pieces of shit.

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    4. Re:I wouldn't use it by mustardayonnaise · · Score: 1

      Yes, Digibeta is still the best as far as SD video quality, but IMX is going to take it over for most video applications. IMX is Sony's newest all-digital format, based on MPEG-2 (its full name is MPEG-IMX), but it's a fairly high bit rate and the quality approaches that of Digibeta. One benefit of it is that the IMX decks play all the Sony pro formats: SP, SX, Digi and IMX. The other HUGE benefit is for reality/documentary/ENG - the small tape loads (for camera) hold 60 minutes instead of the 30 you see in SP and Digi. Halves the tape requirements for field crews. Also, the file format of IMX is going to be used on Sony's future optical- and hard-drive based recorders. Basically, instead of recording to tape and then digitizing into Avid, you'll be able to shoot and then immediately offline via file transfer- no digitizing required. Very nice... but still in its infancy.

  44. In-Camera Editing by base_chakra · · Score: 1

    Why would anyone want to edit video on a camcorder? The camcorder should concentrate on being a camcorder and leave the editing up to laptops.

    Like it or not, in-camera editing 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.

  45. Easy fix for the tapes by Gordonjcp · · Score: 5, Informative
    I have video tapes that are 10-15 years old and many have a white mildew on them, most are otherwise bad now, they will ruin the heads of any VCR you put them in. Gone forever.


    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.

    1. Re:Easy fix for the tapes by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up "informative" !!!

      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...

    2. Re:Easy fix for the tapes by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Only thing to watch is that you're not smearing gunk along the surface of the tape, and that nothing scratches the tape as it goes past (bit of grit on one pad, for instance). This will show up as a horizontal line on playback. If the tapes are very dirty, do them a little bit at a time, checking the pads and replacing as required.

  46. thanks but no thanks by isecore · · Score: 2, Informative

    I haven't RTFA yet (JVC is politely yet firmly denying any connection attempts) but this really seems like a big woofing dog IMHO.

    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 it's a fragile harddrive. Tapes are also very cheap (I buy my DV-tapes for about US$2 a piece)

    Tape-based DV-cameras are very flexible, and this nonsense about JVC putting editing functions on this camera seems completely pointless to me. Editing should be done on an editing-platform (Mac/Final Cut, or whatever floats your boat). Editing capabilites on a camera is a "feature" that no one will use, since it's likely to be crap.

    I don't want a camera that I have to be worried about breaking the storage in. I most assuredly need a camera with replacable storage, since when I'm off shooting a documentary I have no idea as to how much space/tape it will use. Having to limit myself to whatever JVC feels is the norm is completely pointless.

    This whole thing seems to me to be a case of "can we make a harddrive-based camcorder? YEAH! is it of any use? NO, but lets do it anyway because there's always morons who want some new toy!"

    --
    I enjoy large posteriors and I cannot prevaricate.
  47. I think the difference is capacity by i41Overlord · · Score: 1

    An Ipod has the space to store more than enough mp3's. It usually takes people months (or even years, or never) to fill up its hard drive with mp3's.

    The same amount of space for video on the other hand isn't enough. You can fill it up in a couple of hours, or even less if you set the resolution to the highest setting (to compete with MiniDV quality).

    Imagine going on a vacation and having to keep buying new microdrives to shoot more video. On my vacation to Europe I filled up 4 miniDV tapes. It was easy to swap tapes on a ski lift. It wouldn't have been as easy, inexpensive, or had as good video quality if I was using this hard drive based camcorder.

    PS- The Mpeg compression this uses is just like the MicroMV camcorders from Sony. People that have used them say they don't approach the video quality of MiniDV camcorders, they're closer to 8mm video quality.

    1. Re:I think the difference is capacity by kamesh · · Score: 1

      MiniDV can store upto 25GB of data...Microdrives are coming up with storage as high at 60GB already in commercial space(for e.g. iPOD Photo)...You had to carry 4 miniDVs...the advantage is obvious...you will have to carry only a one Microdrive. I think it is a matter of 1-2 years when HD based products will become practical and popular.

  48. Re:It won't die until.... by DarkHelmet · · Score: 1

    And how is this offtopic?
    Stupid moderation system.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
  49. Article read, HD a bad title by mhollis · · Score: 1

    I read the article and it's a fairly good review of new technology that suggests that one could edit out the bad takes to free up hard disk space. Nonetheless, one still has to dump the contents of the drie to a pee cee to edit with the material.

    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 distinguishable from other files on the drive that contain no video and because they are in folders that are similarly, poorly named.

    One might assume that JVC will improve their software eventually but only if the cameras they're selling take off.

    But I have a problem with the title of the article on /. HD to me means high definition.

    --
    Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
  50. My God by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    Even the editors can't be bothered to RTFA nowadays.

    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 compressed than DV) and its tiny optics dictate even lower quality no matter what the compression technique is. DVD is NOT HD.

    JVC DOES have actual HD-capable cameras, but the cameras linked to are not them, and they are best described as "prosumer", a term used often in photography circles to describe equipment that is WAY too expensive for your average consumer, but not nearly as expensive as the true professional stuff. (The JVC HD cameras cost a few thousand dollars each, and use tapes as their media.)

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:My God by teraph · · Score: 1

      The title says "HD-Based".

      Taken in context with the little blurb, it's pretty clear to me that they are using HD to mean "Hard Drive" not "High Definition".

      One could argue that they should have said "HDD-Based", to avoid confusion. But nothing about the post suggests they didn't RTFA.

  51. FAT is understood by all common platforms. by bayerwerke · · Score: 1

    FAT is understood by all common platforms. EXT3 and RieserFS are more limited.

  52. Inadmissable! by mark-t · · Score: 1

    At least with tape the courts pretty well universally accept the premise that what you see on the tape was what the camcorder actually recorded. But digital media is too easily tampered with, and could raise reasonable doubt as to the veracity of what it is reporting in a courtroom.

    1. Re:Inadmissable! by kamesh · · Score: 1

      Great point! Laws must change!!

  53. FYI, DV=compressed by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, DV is also a compressed format, although it uses FAR less compression than MPEG does.

    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.)

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  54. Nisis DV5 by bayerwerke · · Score: 1

    Something called an NSIS DV5 is available, I have seen them advertised in the U.K.. CompactFlash is used to store MPEG-4s.

  55. Harddrives are not very robust ... by kamesh · · Score: 1

    Hmm...I am wondering why we have computers based on HD instead of old tape based Spectrum storage system. Also, why did tape based music die?

  56. Not for video by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Part of the reason for tape is that you can have as much storage as you like. For MiniDV, I can literally carry a day's worth of tape in my pockets. Also you can get the footage back faster. As soon as the camera man is done shooting a tape, you give it to someone else that takes it to the editing guys who dump it to computers.

    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.

    1. Re:Not for video by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      I still like the idea of non-tape media. Copy and paste is always going to be more desireable in my mind than having to convert a tape over using a third device or the camera itself. You are right to say for production work it's not going to cut the mustard, though I don't see why a laptop or pc harddrive based solution couldn't work as well as or better than tape in term of speed and quality.

      Another strategy would to be to throw in a WiFi card and you can have your "all day" capability as the camera dumps the footage off, either on the fly or during downtime, onto your laptop which is back in the car or desktop inside the house/office. This is already occurring in the world of photo journalism, so the pictures are being uploaded within moments of being taken and passed on to the editors.

  57. Bah! by Pfhor · · Score: 1

    So i get to record my video from my micro camera onto a small 4gb microdrive, in mpeg 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.

  58. HD vs HDD by tji · · Score: 1

    It took me a few seconds to figure out the article was talking about the recording mechanism and not the video quality.

    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.

  59. Sample video? by macemoneta · · Score: 1

    I can't understand why companies that make digital product like this don't post samples so we can see the quality. Even 10-second video clips would be enough to see what the camera electronics and optics can do. A few photo samples would be a good idea too. They have a download section on their web page, but all it has is a brochure in PDF. WTF? Is it so hard to transfer the images and video that their own marketing people can't figure it out?

    --

    Can You Say Linux? I Knew That You Could.

  60. Will someone please explain to me, by nusratt · · Score: 1

    why is this preferable to optical media (DVD, etc.), using technology which is less vulnerable to the shocks of field-usage?

    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.

  61. Only if the HD is removable by MacGod · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I can see HD camcorders catching on only if the memory is removable. That way, you could switch between multiple hard drives (think hot-swappable drive bays on 1" drives or something).

    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 don't see decent-quality digital still cameras with embedded memory only do you? Even if you embedded 512MB or 1gig into a digital still cam, *somebody* would still eventually hit that limit. Therefore, having a CompactFlash (or whatever) slot allows for future expansion. I can't see a video camera lacking similar capabilities attaining any level of success.

    --
    "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
  62. USB hard disks for off-site backup by erice · · Score: 1

    USB drives are cheaper per gig than low end tape media. (the media alone!). High end tape backup is more economical with the media but the drives are very expensive. For example, you need to use 15 SDLT tapes in a single SDLT drive to break even with USB drives. That's *manual* tape loading. I scanned Pricewatch. The best I could come up with for a stuffed SDLT autoloader was $3/gigabyte. The drive itself was near $10k.

    I used to be an advocate of tape backup, but I just can't justify it anymore.

    1. Re:USB hard disks for off-site backup by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      Tape backup sucks for all but heavy users - i.e. companies with more than a couple dozen employees or unusually heavy data storage requirements. As you noted, the cost of entry is just way too high now. The $10,000 it would cost to buy a good tape drive would buy you something like 40 250GB hard drives - way more storage than the original post required (500GB). Halve that to 20 250GB drives and you'd still have 10 times the storage requested, 5,000 GB.

      If you were really paranoid about backup security, you could then spend the remaining $5,000 setting up some kind of offsite storage array - maybe at a friend's or relative's home halfway across country - and buying yourself a T1 line you could use to shift the data around.

  63. an hour? by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can only put an hour of recording on it? no thanks.

    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.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  64. When will JVC ever learn? by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

    No Firewire, no Mac support...

    Bad JVC no banana for you!!

    Wake me when Canon has one that takes CF and can shoot 720p.. (Sony proprietary Memory schtick need not apply...)

    PS: This is the answer to the question "How do we get non-DV-standard high-def into camcorders?" Instead of hacking the tape storage format, you just store large random access files on fast memory. This is actually super cool, but I'll hold off for a non-asshat implementation first..

  65. Squish, at $200 a pop.... by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

    The first market entrant to equip these with 2.5" or 1.8" laptop drives (at 20-100G) in USB caddies is going to crunch JVC right out of the market.

    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 consumer at Best Buy, and a piddly 4GB JVC 'corder for $499 sitting next to a 60GB iPod (or Sony, or TEAC or whomever) camcorder for $399. Any choice there?

    I don't think so. Of course, if I ran JVC, I'd force all product managers to read Slashdot.

  66. Why I won't buy it... by johansalk · · Score: 1

    Microdrives are notoriously unreliable and somewhat expensive, i'd rather just use tape. In fact, for the price of a single 4gb microdrive you can get too many tapes. It also uses compressed video, whereas tape is a higher quality video.

  67. Why not both?? by Reziac · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Humorous as the retro image is, that's actually a reasonable thought -- give us a camcorder that does *both* HD and tape, can optionally record directly to either one, AND can dump from one to the other as needed.

    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 comments?

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    1. Re:Why not both?? by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 1

      Humorous as the retro image is, that's actually a reasonable thought -- give us a camcorder that does *both* HD and tape, can optionally record directly to either one, AND can dump from one to the other as needed.

      i'd like a compact hard disk camcorder, with a tape deck that I could plug in to export onto from the hard disk. That way the camcorder wouldn't have to be bulky.

      --
      There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    2. Re:Why not both?? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      That's a nice idea too. Don't some camcorders already detach from the part that holds a VHS tape, so you can use just the camera part itself with a minitape? Same concept, except substitute a HD for the minitape. Best of both worlds!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  68. compact flash by Karma+Sucks · · Score: 1

    Dude, it uses compact flash. If the Mac can't read compact flash or USB storage devices, you've got bigger problems.

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    (Please browse at -1 to read this comment.)
  69. You are mistaken. by i41Overlord · · Score: 1

    Microdrives cannot store 60GB of data. You might be thinking of other kinds of drives, but not Microdrives.

    The 60GB drive in the Ipod Photo that you are referring to is a 1.8" drive which is almost twice as large as the Microdrive, which is 1". The largest capacity of Microdrive is currently 4 GB.

    1. Re:You are mistaken. by kamesh · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. Agree with the 4 GB microdrive statement of yours.

  70. gmail backup? by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 1

    Send them as attachments to your gmail account. :-D

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
  71. No MPEG-4 Support = No Money from Me by LANjackal · · Score: 1

    JVC forgot to notice that MPEG-2 is horribly inefficient at storing video. MPEG-4 support would be better and really easy to add, at that.

  72. There have been HD based cameras by DaveCBio · · Score: 1

    For pro and semi-pro work for a while now. This might be useful for consumers, but it's still a long way from the prosumer features and quality I want. When they come out with a XL-2 level camera with removable drives I'll bite.

  73. steadicam by sprintkayak · · Score: 1

    For over a grand, I'd expect more thought put into how a camcorder is actually USED.

    How about image stabilization? They could put in a metal disk and it would spin. I wonder if they could think of any secondary use for it as well.
    Of course the camera would tend to want to roll a bit when you want it to tilt.

  74. Re:it show's it has a 4 GB drive? by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

    Archive them to both DV and DVD.

    The trick with DVD is to assume that the disc will eventually go bad to the point that the built-in ECC on the disc will no longer correct the errors.

    So what I do is set aside 5-25% of the DVD media for additional error recovery data (a.k.a. parity data created by QuickPar). Then, when the disc starts showing symptoms, I can rip the data off of the disc and use the PAR2 files to repair the damage prior to burning a new copy.

    Works fine as long as the disc hasn't degraded so far that there are more errors then the PAR2 files can correct. (Known as the "recovery window".)

    The weakness with the built-in ECC on DVD discs is that you don't get a warning that you've entered the recovery window. By the time you see errors on the screen, it's probably no longer to recover the data from the corrupted sector on the disc. It's great while it works, but it doesn't give you any warning that you're about to lose the data entirely.

    --
    Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
  75. "capturing" is dead by heroine · · Score: 1

    It's long been known that investment in video capture interfaces has no future. Camcorders eventually are going to be accessed from our workstations like a regular filesystem. The whole idea of logging clips, deck control, serial digital interfaces, and the millions of dollars invested in these systems is going to be replaced by ethernet and network filesystems.