Sunday, December 8, 2013

What video editing software should I buy?

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APOS


I am a college student with an AVCHD video camera. I'm looking for a new to newer editing software that has a great deal of stuff you can do, as I am enthused about the area. I would be using it on a laptop with 4gb of memory and 2.5 processor. My price range is probably $50-$150. If you could give any input that would be great, thanks.


Answer
AVS Video Editor lets you create home videos with little prior computer video experience. With it you can produce video productions in a way that even beginners can use. Supports virtually all video formats. The free evaluation version of AVS Video Editor has no time outs or feature limits.
Download the latest vision:
http://www.dvd-video-converters.com/videoconverter/avs-video-editor.html
Or from its official site:
http://www.avs4you.com/AVS-Video-Editor.aspx?sct=aff&ct=regnow&cid=189508

Is there any advantage with having a memory card in a video camera?




2~Cute-as-


I am going to buy one, but I dont know if it is better to have a memory card than a mini DVD.
I basically just want to load my videos on youtube (after editing them on movie maker)
Thanks in advance!



Answer
Consumer DVD based camcorders provide the WORST video quality - especially if there is any need to edit the video or if you want to upload. Please do not waste your time with a DVD based camcorder. Consumer DVD based camcorders barely make useful doorstops.

Flash memory and Hard disc drive (HDD) camcorders use the same file types. Hard disc drive camcorders have known problems with high levels of vibration and high altitude and can stop recording when exposed to those environments. The video is compressed a lot, but the video is acceptable to some. Copy the video to your computer using USB; you may need a converter like StreamClip in order to get the video in the format your editor can deal with.

MiniDV tape continues to provide the best available video quality because of the least amount of video compression applied to the digital video as it is written to the digital tape. MiniDV tape based video is imported to the computer over firewire connecting the camcorder's DV port to the computer's firewire port. If your computer does not have a firewire port, they are easy to add if your computer has an available expansion slots (desktops use PCI, laptops use PCMCIA or EpressCard).

MovieMaker running under Windows XP cannot deal with HDV or AVCHD high definition video. MovieMaker running under Vista can deal with HDV but not AVCHD. This is only an issue if you get a high definition camcorder. MovieMaker can "capture" standard definition DV from miniDV (over firewire).

Firewire, DV, IEEE1394, and i.LINK are all the same thing - and they are not USB.

For practical purposes, miniDV tape based camcorders use memory cards to store stills. Some (not all) of them allow copying video from the tape to the memory card for transfer of compressed video to computers without a firewire port.

Some hard drive camcorders allow for "hybrid" video capture directly to the camcorder's hard drive or the memory card. For the most part, hard drvie camcorders with a memory card allow stills to be captured to the flash memory card as well.




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