Pretty loud. Probably not as loud as a real gun, but still pretty loud.
I'd use Firewire: USB doesn't seem to be as fast or reliable.
No, Avid is stereo only. External drives are fine for DV, so should be for HDV. quote:Mark - have you had any trouble in color correction when usin...
Agreed: I don't quite understand what you're getting out of the deal if they expect you to produce the DVDs, and you to promote them and they'll give ...
Doubt you'll have a problem on a system that's twice as fast as mine :). One of the benefits of Avid is that it edits MPEG-2 natively, whereas I belie...
quote:If you don't mind me asking, what are the specs on the computer you're using when you edit HDV? P4-3.06/hyperthreading, 1GB RAM, Avid Xpress ...
I think the XLH1 is your only option, otherwise you'd have to move up to XDCAM HD (basically HDV's big brother, recording MPEG-2 to optical disks at h...
I wouldn't even think of picking Britain rather than America... America has a movie industry, Britain doesn't.
Shouldn't be anything 'weirder' than any other DV camera, though I haven't used it myself. Personally though, I'd look at HDV if you can afford it....
I doubt there's any problem unless you're making some claim about the car that might be detrimental to the manufacturer: like having every Ford in the...
It's also arguable as to whether the HVX200 really records HD anyway, given it has small CCDs and a lower resolution than the HDV cameras. Not much po...
is a pretty good site for writers.
Didn't 'Aliens' use Steadicam vests? Though they'd be rather expensive too :).
Depends on what you shot on. For SD footage Digibeta will be best unless you're doing a cuts-only edit of DV, when a Mini-DV master will be an exact c...
What are you playing it back on? If it's a PC monitor you will get jagged lines because video is interlaced. If you want to play the footage on a P...