I have a sony with digital output. I record it onto my kodak program, then download it onto disc. Probably can record it on dvd , but may have to get the disc formatted (I wish I knew what that meant!!)
You really should get the exact model number....that could help in locating software to transfer the video to your PC for burning.
If you cannot locate software to access the video digitially, you can take that $31.95/tape and spend it on a video capture peripheral for your PC. Basically, these gizmos plug into your USB or Firewire port. They provide analog inputs for your video and left/right audio channels. All you do is hook your camera up to the gizmo and run the software to record the video to your PC. These also typically convert to MPEG2 on the fly.
One you have saved all of the video to your PC, you can then burn the files to a DVD. Most of these capturing cards come with software that will help you do this. It’ll also add markers to the files so that you can do things like add chapters and the like.
I’d expect to pay about $100 for a good one. You can get cheaper ones, but I’ve seen the cheaper ones make lousy copies of the source material :-)! I am not an expert on doing this stuff....I bought one of these a few years back to do exactly what you are doing and the results were very good. My particular model was a Dazzle Hollywood DV bridge, but I wasted about $100 more on that particular model...just get yourself one that converts directly to MPEG2 in the device itself and you will be fine :-)!
Well, you start with one of those “Strike Anywhere” matches...
Google has many possibilities for Video8-to-DVD:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=video8+to+dvd&aq=0&oq=video8+
CD Now or Nero are good software but you need a video card.
Digital record from camera to your hard drive, then edit as desired using any of various programs (some free) and then burn onto a DVD.
Step 1: Get the video onto the computer. If it’s an old analog Video8, you’ll need an analog-to-digital video capture device. If it’s Digital8, you can probably transfer straight from the camcorder to the computer.
Step 2: Get from the initial digital video format, probably AVI or similar, onto DVD. I assume you want a DVD that you pop into your DVD player and play on the TV? This will require a transcoding software package. A DVD is actually pretty complex, nothing near as simple as burning audio CDs, etc. The good news is that there are plenty of packages out there now that make it pretty easy.
Throughout the process, pay attention to the settings, because it makes a huge difference in what you will eventually see on your TV screen when you play the final DVD. You don’t want to end up with a DVD that you look at it and say, “Wow, why does it look so much WORSE than the original?”
What model is your camcorder?
MM
This will get you started.
http://windv.mourek.cz/
Your camera model number would help but since it has a USB out, I am assuming it can output in digital format. That’s the good news. It will be a time consuming process but you can download your video to .avi format to your hard drive.
.avi files are huge so you will need plenty of disk space. Also, AVI files cannot be burned to DVD directly. You will need specialized DVD creating software to convert AVI to mpeg-2 fist(another very time consuming process if your computer is slow). I use the fully professional Adobe Premiere Pro cs3 for my video editing, but you should be able to find the consumer version (Adobe Premiere elements 3.0 used for less than 40 bucks on Amazon) I have never used Premiere Elements myself but knowing that it’s geared toward the average consumer, going from avi to DVD should be just a few mouse clicks.
The downside is if a relative wants a copy that has a DVD player that won't play DIVX. You can always convert then to MPEG and make them their own copy.
The movie pirates on the web transfer movies as Divx or avi so it doesn't take as long to transfer. DVD players today usually will play a DIVX or AVI file without conversion. Older players still require MPEG or VOB. Many players today can read RW disks with several formats.