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ZMODO DVR-DK61102-1TB 16 CH Security Surveillance DVR Outdoor Security Camera System 1TB $549.99 The kit DVR-DK61102-1TB includes a H.264 standalone DVR with 1TB HD and 8 outdoor security cameras providing everything you need to have your surveillance system up and running in your home or business quickly and easily. The DVR-H9116UVDH is a 16 channel, fully integrated, real time, and hardware based standalone digital video recorder. With PTZ camera control, network access, 3G mobile view, mo… |
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ZMODO DVR-DK61103-1TB 16 CH Security Surveillance DVR Outdoor Security Camera System 1TB $1,142.85 The kit DVR-DK61103-1TB includes a H.264 standalone DVR with 1TB HD and 16 outdoor security cameras providing everything you need to have your surveillance system up and running in your home or business quickly and easily. The DVR-H9116UVDH is a 16 channel, fully integrated, real time, and hardware based standalone digital video recorder. With PTZ camera control, network access, 3G mobile view, m… |
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KJB Security SleuthGear NightOwl IR Clock Radio Camera $549.00 Just because the lights go out doesn’t mean your camera can’t capture all the action! Our new NightOwl IR camera allows you to see in the dark! This revolutionary hidden camera can see up to 20-30 feet in complete darkness. Currently available in our Cube Clock, soon to be expanded to more products! Specifications: ? Video Resolution: 1280×720, 720×480 / 320×240 ? Co… |
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Flip Video Ultra Series Camcorder, 60 Minutes (Orange) $149.99 The FVULT60MINB 60-Minute Flip Video Ultra Camcorder lets you capture the everyday moments that happen anywhere and share them with friends and family everywhere. It’s simple, portable, and amazingly affordable. Simple editing tools let you make custom-edited movie mixes with music Create and organize your personal video library 1.5 diagonal color anti-glare playback screen for instant view… |
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Panasonic VIERA G10 Series TC-P50G10 50-Inch 1080p Plasma HDTV $1,599.95 Panasonic TCP50G10 provides the incredible clarity and the best viewing experience, you can now enjoy a complete web entertainment even without your pc. Panasonic has been dedicated to bringing new picture with improved technologies, by addition of Amazon’s VOD streaming video service. The VIERA G10 Plasma series include many features like the Viera cast web menu, Viera image viewer and THX certif… |
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SteelSeries 4H Lightweight Gaming Headset with XL-Sized Earcushions $104.12 Frequency response: 16 28.000 Hz…. |
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Sony Vegas Movie Studio HD Platinum 11 Production Suite $54.95 Video editing audio mastering & disc authoringVegas Movie Studio HD Platinum 11 Production Suite takes HD video and audio production to the next level with tools for professional-level sound design and more video effects and transitions. Edit video in nearly any format including high-definition HDV and AVCHD and create a 3D project using the innovative stereoscopic 3D tools. Use the included Sound… |
Sony Digital Video Camera Recorder
How do I copy stuff from a DVD to a DV tape?
So, I feel stupid for having to ask this, since people on YouTube do it all the time, but I want to make a video with clips from some of my favorite movies. So I need to get those clips from DVDs to my computer. I don’t want to use a DVD ripper. I’ve heard that I can connect my Sony Digital Video Camera Recorder to the DVD player and make this work. How do I do that? I tried connecting the camera to my DVD player (which is built into my TV) with the A/V connecting cable and pressed record on the VCR mode as the DVD played, but, though the record sign showed up, the DVD didn’t record to the tape. Please help me figure out how to do this!
Nick, thanks for the suggestions, but when I tried that, it did the same thing as before: it just shows blue but a lighter blue than the usual VCR mode. Is there a certain order in which I need to turn the camcorder or the TV on or something? Please tell me if you have any other ideas.
The process might vary slightly with your camcorder, but here is what I do. Connect the camcorder to the output from the DVD player. Put the camcorder in VCR or playback mode. Go to the menu and look for something like “AV to DV on” or something similar, and set it to on. This will set the camcorder to take the input from the DVD player. Then you should be able to press record in VCR mode and have it record your DVD. On some camcorders, you have to find an additional setting in the menu instead of just pressing record. If your TV is close enough to your computer, you can avoid recording at all and just connect the camcorder to the computer via firewire and the DVD player via the A/V cable, and set AV to DV to “on.” Then just play the DVD and capture it with your editing software.
What kind of camcorder do you have? On my Canon Elura I have to press the funtion button, then scroll down to REC PAUSE, then select execute. On my other camcorder, I just hit the record button. My only other suggestion is to make sure you are using the cable designed to connect your camera and have it hooked up correctly. It probably have red, yellow, and white connectors on one end and a plug similar to a headphone jack on the other. Make sure that goes to the A/V port on the camcorder and to the output on the DVD player. It is also possible that your camera does not support doing this, but most MiniDV camcorders do.
Learning About Digital Video Profoundly
The first success in the creation of a digital video was reported back in the 70s and 80s when with a special effect unit and some time base connectors, an analog video input was digitized. The signal, effects and manipulation of the video improved considerably afterwards. Bosch also created digital video equipments in the 70s but they remained lab research only until 1986 when the first digital video was created with Sony D-1.
The first types of digital video formats depended on the use of an analog source that served as the starting point for the digitized encoding in computer-readable patterns. Step by step, television transmissions adopted the digital video standard when passing from the analog to the digital signal. Soon, the appearance of the non-linear editing systems would mark the evolution of electronics for good. High definition television would not be possible without it.
All the communication devices designed and manufactured today included a digital video camera, not to mention that almost every family has such a piece of electronics in the household. There is hardly any mobile phone model that does not incorporate a digital video camera.
The more popular concept of camcorder (a device that combines the recorder and the camera) is winning the market as our society depends on the quick quality access to information more than ever. Digital video information can be stored without any danger of degradation or data corruption; after editing, the clarity of the image is the same as at the moment when it was filmed.
Besides the combined use with mobile phones, digital video has lots of applications with video conferencing systems as well as with communications on the Internet. The editing process for the applications has been simplified to a very large extent and there is an avalanche of programs, softwares and tools that make editing possible. The most common format for editing a digital video with Internet applications is Windows Media while MPEG2 is exclusively used for DVDs.
One can hardly express the full number of applications and the usage extent of digital video technology nowadays. From home applications and corporate business, digital technology now defines our society better than ever. And more evolved forms are expected to appear. There is more in stock with digital video than we may know!
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