Sony's Announces Tiny High-Def Camcorder
Apr 26, 2007 

 Sony's Announces Tiny High-Def Camcorder 

 Sony's HDR-CX7, its smallest high-def camcorder yet, records video to a 
MemoryStick Pro Duo card. 

 Martyn Williams, IDG News Service 

 Thursday, April 26, 2007 6:00 AM PDT 

 Sony Corp. has announced its smallest high-definition camcorder to date. 

 The HDR-CX7, which is due to go on sale in June, records 1080i high-definition 
video directly to a MemoryStick Pro Duo card. Until now its camcorders have
relied on MiniDV tape, DVD discs or hard-disk drives to store video, but the 
memory card slot and associated electronic take up less space and mean a 
smaller,
lighter camera. 

 Using a memory card also means that getting video into a PC is as easy as 
removing the card from the camera and slotting it into a card reader. The video
must still be copied to the PC's hard-disk for viewing, but a software upgrade 
due mid-year will make it possible to watch video directly from high-speed
Pro Duo- or Pro HG-type MemoryStick cards on both a PC and the PlayStation 3.  

 The flash memory-based recording also helps reduce power consumption and noise 
over other methods. But it doesn't come without disadvantages. Memory cards
are quite expensive, and users will be able to store only about 30 minutes of 
video on a 4G-byte card in the camera's highest quality mode. 

 Behind the lens is a 3-megapixel image sensor, and the camera can also capture 
6-megapixel still images, Sony said. Other features include a 10x optical
zoom lens and a 2.7-inch wide-screen, touch-sensitive LCD (liquid crystal 
display) monitor. 

 The CX7 weighs 450 grams and measures 69 millimeters by 67mm by 129mm. It will 
cost about US$1,200 in the U.S. 

 Sony will also begin selling two hard-disk drive-based HD camcorders in June. 
The HDR-SR7 has a 60G-byte drive and the HDR-SR5 a 40G-byte drive. The SR7
comes with the same 3-megapixel image sensor used in the CX7, while the SR5 
uses a 2-megapixel sensor. In the U.S. the cameras will cost $1,400 and $1,100,
respectively. Prices and launch dates for other markets have not been 
announced. 

 All three camcorders record in the AVCHD format, which was developed by Sony 
and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. (Panasonic) and uses MPEG4 
compression.


 On Thursday Sony also announced an update to its Vegas 7 video editing 
software that adds support for AVCHD files. An upgrade for the consumer "Vegas 
Movie
Studio Platinum Edition 8" software, adding AVCHD support, will be available 
from July, Sony said.      Authentic-looking e-mails target threaten bodily
harm if recipients do not pay thousands of dollars to the sender. 

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,131242-pg,1/article.html

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