Canon EOS 40D Review

Blogged in Digital Camera Sunday July 20, 2008 at about 10:55 am

Well, after several films, a couple of hours clicking away and finally printing the images we captured, we finally decided that the Canon EOS 40D is indeed worth its $1,250 - $1,500 price tag. And yeah, it is superior in performance as compared to the 30D. Let’s be honest; the Canon EOS 40D is a D-SLR camera that is about the most complete a camera can be. It is a solid camera, with excellent auto focus, a silent shutter and mirror, a beautiful viewfinder and fine operation. Packed with lots of advanced features and user-friendly settings, the Canon EOS 40D is a great option for film based SLR user or those looking to upgrade their DSLRs. With a 10.1 megapixels CMOS sensor, the 40D reproduces exceptionally accurate colour with minimal noise thanks to its 14-bits image processing and redesigned pixels on its sensor.

Canon EOS 40D

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Casio Exilim EX-Z77 Digital Camera

Blogged in Digital Camera Wednesday April 9, 2008 at about 3:02 am

The Casio Exilim EX-Z77 packs a ton of features, including some really cool movie features, at a great price.

Editing Movies from a Digital Camcorder

Blogged in Digital Camera Sunday June 18, 2006 at about 10:06 am

Do you make your own home movies? Then you’ll want to turn your PC into a video editing studio—which is especially easy if you have a digital video (DV) camcorder, in either the Digital8 or MiniDV formats. Just install a desktop video editing program and beef up your hardware as necessary; the results can be truly amazing.

PC-based video editing software performs many of the same functions as the professional editing consoles you might find at your local television station. You can use this software to cut entire scenes from your movie, rearrange scenes, add fancy transitions between scenes, add titles (and subtitles), and even add your own music soundtrack. Go with an all-digital video system—from DV camcorder to DVD output—and you can do all this without degrading the quality of the original footage.

**Don’t confuse the Digital8 and MiniDV digital recording formats with the new High Definition Television (HDTV) digital broadcast format. HDTV is a broadcast standard with higher resolution and a wider 16:9 aspect ratio; DV camcorders record digitally, but employ the older NTSC low-resolution broadcast standard.

Another advantage of using a DV camcorder is that you don’t need to install a separate video capture card in your PC, as you would with older types of camcorders. What you do need is a FireWire or USB 2.0 port on your PC. (FireWire is preferable; the faster connection is necessary to handle the huge stream of digital data pouring from your DV recorder into your PC in real time.)

Necessary Upgrades

Whether you’re using a DV camcorder or an analog model (discussed in Upgrade #4), you definitely need to beef up your computer, as video editing is one of the most taxing applications you can perform. You’ll need a fairly powerful computer just to get started—a Pentium III or (better still) a Pentium 4 machine, running at no less than 1.5GHz, is the bare minimum configuration necessary.

Assuming you have this type of computing horsepower, the first thing to upgrade is your hard disk. Raw digital video takes up about 3.6MB for each second of footage; work with an hour-long movie, and you’ll fill up two-thirds of a 20GB disk. So a big—no, make that a huge—hard disk is a necessity. Some users simply add a second hard drive to their system, dedicated solely to video editing. Whatever you do, make sure it’s a fast disk; choose an IDE drive with a 7,200 RPM spin rate, or (if you’re flush) a SCSI drive. And when you install the drive, format it with the NTFS file system if you can. (You can if you’re running Windows XP; you can’t if you’re running an older operating system.)

Memory is also important. Lots of it. Like 512MB worth. Any less and you’ll find your system slows down considerably when processing all that digital video data.

While we’re on the subject of memory, it helps to have a video card with lots of onboard memory. For best performance, look for a card with 64MB or 128MB video RAM.

Finally, consider going with a big monitor—the easier to view your movies with. In fact, you might think about a dual-monitor system, so you can edit on one screen and view your results on the other.

As to software, if you’re running Windows XP, you have Windows Movie Maker pre-installed on your machine. This is a good basic editing program (and it’s free—always a good thing!), but you might want something a little more powerful. For real video editing power, check out Adobe Premiere (www.adobe.com) or Ulead VideoStudio and MediaStudio Pro (www.ulead.com).

So here’s all you need to do to upgrade your system for digital video editing:

Upgrade Checklist for Digital Video Editing

FireWire or USB 2.0 port

80GB or larger dedicated hard disk

512MB or more RAM

64MB or 128MB video card

Large CRT or LCD monitor

Optional second monitor

Digital8 or MiniDV camcorder

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