prices on samsung camcorders?
34x optical zoom digital cam
Answer by love me
$ 199.99+free shipping
I now love this camcorder, its light, easy to use and the video after being converted on my computer with the right software makes the quality wide screen and crystal clear. First the software that comes with it is called Cyberlink Mediashow and it seems pretty sweet but it won’t allow a 16:9 aspect ratio even when selected. I went through Samsung’s tech support through their level 2 guys who were stumped and I found free software at download.com, “Free Video Converter v 1.3 which updates automatically after installing to v1.4″ and by selecting avi with Xvid 624×352 with 16:9, I got wide screen and great quality, I could have chosen up to 1920×1080 but on my 43″ plasma 624×352 is sweet. I’ve got my 8 and 11 year olds using this camera like pro’s and the videos are worth much more than the camera cost.
Hopefully Cyberlink Mediashow will come up with a patch for their software as it has the potential to be great if they would just fix the aspect ratio issue.
Samsung SC-MX20 Flash Memory Camcorder w/34x Optical Zoom
What do you think? Answer below!
I am wanting to get a small camcorder that has decent quality and sound. Ive found a few but they seem to have both very good or very bad reviews… so if anyone has any experience with any of the cameras, please tell me what you thought of it. Here are my choices that ive narrowed it down to.. if you have any other suggestions feel free to post them but i cant go very high in the
price range thanks.
Panasonic SDR-S10
http://www.trustedreviews.com/camcorders/review/2007/06/30/Panasonic-SDR-S10-camcorder/p1
Samsung SC-X300
http://reviews.cnet.com/digital-camcorders/samsung-sc-x300-camcorder/4505-6500_7-32365174.html?tag=lst
or
Sanyo Xacti VPC-CG6
http://reviews.cnet.com/digital-camcorders/sanyo-xacti-vpc-cg6/4505-6500_7-32391845.html?tag=lst
thanks
Answer by arrobins321
The sanyo says that it has a larger CCD chip (chip that converts light/what you are recording into digital signal) So in theory it will get you a getter picture quality. However all 3 have very small single chip setups, which isn’t very impressive. I would look for a more conventional handheld camcorder setup as well. I have not heard great things about those strange vertical thin camcorders. Whenever I look to but a new camcorder i always check it out here first
http://www.camcorderinfo.com
Answer by Nu’uanu
arrobins321 makes some good points about the video quality perspective… you did make one comment that was not addressed – specifically, “decent sound”.
There are those who say that no camcorder comes with decent built-in microphones. I think it goes a little past that and there are a number of contributing factors.
While I agree that I would not take the mics in a camcorder and expect them to behave like expensive external mics (like Sennheisers), I believe it is possible to get useful audio recording from built-in camcorder mics IF the audio source is at a normal level – that is, not too soft and not REALLY loud and the audio source – if at a normal level – is closer than about 12 feet away.
Keep in mind that most camcorders do not have manual audio level control, so they rely on an “automatic audio level/gain” circuit. It is constantly working to make low audio louder and loud audio lower.
If the audio is too soft or there is not background noise at all, you will here the audio recorded with a characteristic “whooshing” sound as the auto mic gain works to find audio.
If the audio is soft and is further than 10-12 feet away, and there is noise between the mic and the intended audio source, the built-in mic will pick up everything between the camcorder and the audio source. And if the intended audio source is intermittent, then the multiple audio sources will become the focus of the camcorder’s mics.
If the audio is REALLY loud (marching bands, rock/hiphop/other loud amplified music, modified engine noise, etc…), the auto mic gain circuit will not be able to keep up making the recorded audio sound muddy and it will clip a lot.
Since miniDV tape continues to provide the best available video quality, I’ll stay there and let you rely on arrobins321 reply…
The ONLY low-cost consumer camcorders with some sort of audio control – that I have been able to find – are some of the Sony DCR-HC series miniDV tape camcorders. In their menu, there is a “Normal” or “Low” (for loud audio) mic gain selection. There may be others out there, but I have not found them. The Canon ZR800 and ZR950 are low-cost and have mic-in jacks, but without manual audio control the same clipping/muddiness (and swooshing) will happen, even with an external mic.
The least expensive camcorders – of which I am aware that have full manual audio control are the Canon HV20, HV30, Sony HDR-HC7 and HC9. These all also have mic-in jacks, too.
The alternative is to use a “field recorder” like those from Marantz, M-Audio, Zoom or Fostex (among others) and use the field recorder’s manual audio control – then replace the camcorder’s audio with the audio from the field recorder when the video is edited.
So… if your audio is neither loud nor soft and your video subject (and hence your audio subject) is between 3-12 feet away, in “normal” light (not “low light”) you’ll be fine. Go outside any of these boundaries and the rules change – requiring different equipment characteristics and features.
What do you think? Answer below!
EU probes two mega mergers in HDD sector
The European Union (EU) antitrust watchdog said on Monday it had opened two separate in-depth investigations into two proposed mega mergers in the hard disk drive (HDD) sector.
Read more on US News Las Vegas – Philippines
Samsung’s HMX-H106 camcorder’s claim to fame is that it’s the first camcorder with a built-in 64GB SSD.
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