Shooting with media in mind
Before camcorder shopping, consider which recording format is right for you
Tech Holiday Gift Guide |
Gifts for the nostalgic geek Perhaps the ultimate holiday gift for any technology geek is a vintage artifact plucked from the pages of computer history. |
Real Women’s Guide to Technology |
An MSN special that focuses on consumer technologies that can benefit women. |
Tech and gadgets videos |
App thwarts iThief Dec. 9: A tracking app leads police straight to an iPhone thief. KTEN's Deeda Payton reports. |
Video |
Auto Tech |
A better economy may lure buyers, but these trends could seal the deal. |
|
If you've been dabbling with video, perhaps using a Flip camcorder or shooting video with your smartphone, and want to move to a camcorder with more features and capabilities, there's plenty from which to choose. Before you do, it's a good idea to decide on which recording media is right for you.
Current digital camcorders use a variety of media — hard disk drives, built-in solid-state memory, removable flash memory cards, mini-DVDs to record video and even tape. Digital tape — the most popular being the MiniDV format — has been the norm for nearly 10 years, but is rapidly losing ground to flash memory.
"We forecast that 90 percent of camcorders within three years will be using flash memory, whether it's embedded in a camcorder as a drive, or via memory cards," said Christopher Chute, IDC's worldwide digital imaging practice research manager.
Michael Rubin, author of several books on filmmaking and technology including "The Little Digital Video Book," agrees flash memory is the future. But he is also an advocate of miniDV for serious enthusiasts, even though he realizes "it's going away, and it is going to get harder and harder this year to find a miniDV camcorder."
More on that in a moment. The "traditional" camcorder market — think advanced features such as rotating LCD screens and optical zooms of at least 15x — has been "flat for quite a number of years now," according to Ross Rubin, director of industry analysis for The NPD Group. And the advent of the pocket-sized and inexpensive Flip in 2007 had a dramatic effect. For less than $200, anyone could capture good-quality video easily and quickly.
A digital camcorder, often costing $1,000 or more, was no longer the province of the well-to-do or the technologically savvy. Manufacturers have paid attention. Prices have fallen — many models now start at $300, and the average selling price is $600, according to Chute.
While flash memory is the medium of the future, here's a look at some of the pros and cons of various camcorder storage media:
Hard disk drives: Camcorders with built-in hard disk drives are generally less expensive compared to those with flash memory. For example, in one recent ad, Sony showed its DCR-SR47 Handycam Camcorder with a 60-gigabyte hard drive for $399 next to its DCR-SX40 Flash Memory Handycam Camcorder for $339 with 16 GB of internal flash memory.
As a guideline, standard video runs about 4.5 minutes per one gigabyte; compressed, high-definition video is smaller, with about 7 minutes per GB.
While it might seem that a 60-gigabyte hard drive is a better value than a similarly priced 16 GB flash-memory based drive, that's not necessarily true.
"Hard drives right now are definitely larger sizes than flash drives because they're less expensive," said Chute.
But hard disk drives have some disadvantages. The biggest is the drive's fragility. "Hard drives have a lot of sensitive, moving parts, even more so than tape drives," said Michael Rubin.
"Camcorders live in the elements, and these consumer devices are not that robust. I wouldn't feel comfortable shooting a lot of video and having it on a built-in hard disk, because if that thing crashes, like hard disks do, you've lost the whole camera and all the video on it."
Flash drives: Hard disk drives use rotating, magnetic platters to store data. Flash-based, solid state drives are made up of chips, which are less volatile than hard drives. With no moving parts, flash drives are also considered more reliable and rugged.
Many camcorder makers that use flash memory also provide a slot on the camcorder for an SD or SD High Capacity (SDHC) card for additional video storage. Sony uses its proprietary Memory Sticks. An 8 GB Memory Stick PRO Duo card retails for about $60; a 4 GB card for about $40.
Canon gives customers three choices for storage: flash memory, hard disk drives and miniDV tapes, said Ben Thomas, supervisor of Canon USA's Consumer Imaging Group for video marketing, said in a recent interview.
Flash drives are "more durable, much smaller, much better on battery life, and they're very quiet," he said. "A lot of camcorders with DVDs and hard drives make a lot of noise and emit a lot of heat. Flash memory avoids those issues."
Camcorders that have between 8 and 16 GB of flash memory are a good size for most consumers, said Rubin. With a more limited size, that means you'll make it a point to get video off the camcorder and onto a computer.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM VIDEO 2.0 |
| Add Video 2.0 headlines to your news reader: |



