Re: VHS to DVD-r (was blank ;-) ) (And now about bridging) :o)

2005-10-22 Thread Paul Doyle

Hi Hugh,

If all you want to do is copy straight from VHS to DVD and time is an 
issue then consider a DVD recorder.


We bought a Panasonic DVD recorder back in the early days when they 
cost about twice their current price. We also have an eMac that is 
great for video editing.


When all I need is a duplication, I go for the recorder because it is 
less time consuming. it also gives excellent results when recording 
from a Digital set top box.


In your case it may be a cheaper option too.

We also did the DV camera bridge thing a few months back. Works a treat 
if you can find the right camera.  Costs a little more than one of the 
the DV boxes though.


Hope this is helpful,

Good luck
Paul


On 21/10/2005, at 12:14 PM, Daniel Kerr wrote:


On 21/10/2005 11:25 AM, Rod [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



On 21/10/2005, at 11:15 AM, Hugh Griffiths wrote:

Hi, I am looking for advice on what is the best way to burn dvd's of 
my

many hours of VHS video (currently standing at around 200+ hours) of
family stuff. I have a G5 Imac and a hi-fi stereo VHS player, just 
not

sure what the best way to connect the two is, and what the best
software
would be.

Hugh


Either use a Canopus DV box (which will let you plug in your VHS
player, then firewire into your Mac), or invest in a DV camcorder that
has an analogue bridge function.  The Canons are fairly cheap now, and
work well (in saying that, the bridge function of my MV600i no longer
works with iMovie 5 :-(, worked fine in iMovie4).

iMovie and iDVD are your best bets.  Easy to use, and would have come
free with your iMac.

Seeya

Rod!




Rod,..it should work (I'm pretty sure). Just make sure you're using 
iMovie

5.0.1 and not 5.0.2. It involves a bit of mucking around, deleting it,
reinstalling it and then just not updating it all the way.
I did it for another client whose machine used to do it, then when 
they went
updated iMovie it wouldn't. So I deleted iMovie, reinstalled it from 
the
iLife DVD and updated it to 5.0.1. And it worked again! :o) They could 
then

use it as a bridge! :o)

Hope that helps!

Kind Regards
Daniel
---
Daniel Kerr
MacWizardry

Phone: 0414 795 960
Email: danielATmacwizardryDOTcomDOTau
Web:   http://www.macwizardry.com.au


**For everything Macintosh**


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Re: VHS to DVD-r (was blank ;-) )

2005-10-21 Thread Rod


On 21/10/2005, at 11:15 AM, Hugh Griffiths wrote:


Hi, I am looking for advice on what is the best way to burn dvd's of my
many hours of VHS video (currently standing at around 200+ hours) of
family stuff. I have a G5 Imac and a hi-fi stereo VHS player, just not
sure what the best way to connect the two is, and what the best 
software

would be.

Hugh

Either use a Canopus DV box (which will let you plug in your VHS 
player, then firewire into your Mac), or invest in a DV camcorder that 
has an analogue bridge function.  The Canons are fairly cheap now, and 
work well (in saying that, the bridge function of my MV600i no longer 
works with iMovie 5 :-(, worked fine in iMovie4).


iMovie and iDVD are your best bets.  Easy to use, and would have come 
free with your iMac.


Seeya

Rod!



Re: VHS to DVD-r (was blank ;-) ) (And now about bridging) :o)

2005-10-21 Thread Daniel Kerr
On 21/10/2005 11:25 AM, Rod [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
 On 21/10/2005, at 11:15 AM, Hugh Griffiths wrote:
 
 Hi, I am looking for advice on what is the best way to burn dvd's of my
 many hours of VHS video (currently standing at around 200+ hours) of
 family stuff. I have a G5 Imac and a hi-fi stereo VHS player, just not
 sure what the best way to connect the two is, and what the best
 software
 would be.
 
 Hugh
 
 Either use a Canopus DV box (which will let you plug in your VHS
 player, then firewire into your Mac), or invest in a DV camcorder that
 has an analogue bridge function.  The Canons are fairly cheap now, and
 work well (in saying that, the bridge function of my MV600i no longer
 works with iMovie 5 :-(, worked fine in iMovie4).
 
 iMovie and iDVD are your best bets.  Easy to use, and would have come
 free with your iMac.
 
 Seeya
 
 Rod!
 
 

Rod,..it should work (I'm pretty sure). Just make sure you're using iMovie
5.0.1 and not 5.0.2. It involves a bit of mucking around, deleting it,
reinstalling it and then just not updating it all the way.
I did it for another client whose machine used to do it, then when they went
updated iMovie it wouldn't. So I deleted iMovie, reinstalled it from the
iLife DVD and updated it to 5.0.1. And it worked again! :o) They could then
use it as a bridge! :o)

Hope that helps!

Kind Regards
Daniel
---
Daniel Kerr
MacWizardry

Phone: 0414 795 960
Email: danielATmacwizardryDOTcomDOTau
Web:   http://www.macwizardry.com.au


**For everything Macintosh**