Posted on 03/09/2007 4:20:44 AM PST by siunevada
Except it probably won't convert any of my copy-protected VHS movies into a shiny new DVD.
I think the selling point it the time.
two hours for each tape to transfer in real time; editing and touching up the result on the computer screen; and then waiting another two hours for the resulting video burn onto a DVD.
In a couple of years there will probably be generic knockoffs for much less than $218.
A $218 box for suckers. I bought a $99 Miglia TVMax box. Not only did I then record all of my VHS tapes to DVD, but my cable TV plugs into it, and turns my Mac into a DVR.
By the way, NYT, it only takes twenty minutes for me to burn a 2-hour DVD, not 2 hours.
You have to play the VHS tape real time to convert to digital format.
Also, the quality of the typical analog video to digital video encoder is pretty poor.
That's nice.
But how do I convert my music cassettes to cds?
connect your receiver line out into your PC/Mac line in on a decent video card and do it with Roxio or Nero and your CD or DVD burner. convert to mp3 or use audio format. works pretty well, but you're limited to the quality of the cassettes (they deteriorate over time) and your old cassette player and your stereo.
copy-protected VHS movies
No such thing. If you can see it, or if you can hear it, you can copy it.
...but if technological advances continue, we will eventually learn to detect such records from their stone, glass, metal, et al. relics and convert them to video, photographic, and sound records ourselves.
Everything is recorded in the Akashic Records.
The problem with analog video tapes is that they canonlkhy be copied in real time; hence, a 2 hour tape will always take 2 hours to copy to any machine.
What do you need on your PC to do it right now with the new Sony box?
I mean, how can I plug my camera into the computer and make digital recordings.
Anybody?
:D
A DVD-R is only $60?
We are buried in videotapes.
Finally, are the final movies in an easily convertable format? Can you convert them to Quicktime? Can you use the Mac like a TV tuner then?
Sounds great and I'll eventually get around to it (hopefully after the price comes way down). My first priority is to figure out how to transfer all my old vinyl albums to CD without spending a fortune.
Cassettes can be ripped to CD, but because the tapes are of inferior quality to start with, the results will not be gratifying.
But if your tapes are material that can't be repurchased on CD, there are some commercial services on the web that will do the transfer for you at very resonable prices. My brother did that with an original tape and was happy with it. Then he just duped all the copies he wanted.
I have heard some rips from vinyl LPs that were quite good. But the persons doing it were very serious hobbyists.
Ping for later.
I've been thinking about ripping movies off the DVR and burning DVDs.
Don't have the time right now to examine the thread.
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