Legacy Multimedia Blog

Musings on personal history, video biographies and other digital tributes.

Thinking of Getting a New Video Camera for Christmas?

Posted on November 27, 2007 - Filed Under Family Memories, Media Archiving |



Flickr photo courtesy of George
D Thompson

I’ve recently started my holiday shopping frenzy and while buying gifts for others, I’m usually motivated to buy something for my favorite person, me!

One of the items I have been considering lately is a new video camera. Every time I shop for video cameras, I am amazed at how much the technology seems to be changing and how many proprietary format cameras there are out there. Over the last couple of years, video cameras that stored your footage onto a DVD were the big thing. Prior to that, there was MiniDV, Video8, Hi8, VHS, VHS-C. Now I’ve noticed that some of the new cameras are storing your footage on a chip which can be downloaded directly to your computer through a USB cable.

Format wars, or the competition between mutually incompatible data storage
devices and recording formats for electronic media, have been going on since
the early part of the 20th century. If you’re of my generation you’ll remember
the cassette vs 8 track tape wars.

The thing to keep in mind when you make a choice of video camcorder
is how will you store your media. The problem with recording directly
on a DVD is that the camera automically compresses the footage so if you want
to take your footage into a computer and edit it at a later date, you’ll be editing
compressed footage and then compressing it again for output. Not the best quality film for sure. Plus, if you get a scratch on your DVD, you’re SOL as the DVD will probably be ruined and the footage lost forever.

That is the problem that I forsee with these new camcorders that shoot onto
a chip. Yes, you can download the video directly to your computer but then
what are you going to do with it? Hard drives are notorious for failing and
uncompressed video requires HUGE hard drive capacity. These chips are costly
to use as storage devices and your home computer is not the best place to be
storing valuable footage or photographs.

So I will probably opt to go with the tried and true camcorder that records
to miniDV. MiniDV is digital footage used for semi-professional and some professional purposes. I’ll be able to load this footage onto my computer, play with it until I’m blue in the face, and always have the original tape stored away as my backup. There’s always a possibility that something could happen to the tape but there is a much higher probablity of something happening to my computer.

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