The NLE paradigm has always been that you need to compress analog video signals to get them onto a desktop computer. Then, after you've edited the digitized video files, you need to be able to decompress them back into an analog signal. This has produced a general acceptance of the idea that desktop video capture cards are a 'you get what you pay for' situation, wherein the more expensive the capture hardware, the better the quality will be. Quality has always been the big issue.
That whole paradigm has been completely shifted with DV, mini-DV and D8, however, because the camcorder now does all the compressing and decompressing. The whole idea of a dedicated capture card with hardware compression and decompression has been eliminated by shifting the compression and decompression into the camcorder, itself. Now all you need is an IEEE-1394 port on your computer, and these are extremely cheap.
Currently, I know of two IEEE-1394 products being sold that come with video editing software. The SIIG IEEE-1394 DV CAM KIT, and the ADS Pyro Digital Video 1394DV Firewire Card. For an additional $199 (USD), either products' accompanying software can be upgraded to MediaStudio Pro version 6.
For the amateur desktop NLE user, this is a very significant development. Now with the generic IEEE-1394 port and MSP6, the end user can have the same level of excellent quality in a finished DV project as you can get from ANY of the more expensive hardware based products.
In the past, the issue has always been about the QUALITY of what you ended up with in an NLE project, and the more expensive the systems, the better that quality ended up being. That issue is no longer part of the mix when looking at how the more expensive 'DV Solutions' stack up. The quality of the native DV goes completely unchanged from the camcorder to the computer and back again, no matter whether you're using a generic IEEE-1394 port or an RT2000.
This is a reality adjustment for anyone who has been doing NLE for more than six months. It's a whole new ball game!
That whole paradigm has been completely shifted with DV, mini-DV and D8, however, because the camcorder now does all the compressing and decompressing. The whole idea of a dedicated capture card with hardware compression and decompression has been eliminated by shifting the compression and decompression into the camcorder, itself. Now all you need is an IEEE-1394 port on your computer, and these are extremely cheap.
Currently, I know of two IEEE-1394 products being sold that come with video editing software. The SIIG IEEE-1394 DV CAM KIT, and the ADS Pyro Digital Video 1394DV Firewire Card. For an additional $199 (USD), either products' accompanying software can be upgraded to MediaStudio Pro version 6.
For the amateur desktop NLE user, this is a very significant development. Now with the generic IEEE-1394 port and MSP6, the end user can have the same level of excellent quality in a finished DV project as you can get from ANY of the more expensive hardware based products.
In the past, the issue has always been about the QUALITY of what you ended up with in an NLE project, and the more expensive the systems, the better that quality ended up being. That issue is no longer part of the mix when looking at how the more expensive 'DV Solutions' stack up. The quality of the native DV goes completely unchanged from the camcorder to the computer and back again, no matter whether you're using a generic IEEE-1394 port or an RT2000.
This is a reality adjustment for anyone who has been doing NLE for more than six months. It's a whole new ball game!
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