hdmi on my HDC SD1 Panasonic camcorder and MACBook Pro fully loaded

I am really a beginner here...

I know the issues about this camera having an unsupported format AVCHD. I am trying to figure out how to get around this.

There is a company that makes a Blackmagic Design BMD HDMI I/O CARD CAPT-INTENSITY ( http://www.macmall.com/macmall/shop/detail.asp?dpno=7185967&Redir=1&description= Blackmagic%20Design-BMD%20HDMI%20I/O%20CARD-Video%20Cards)

This is their pitch:

Blackmagic Design introduced Intensity, the first HDMI PCI Express card. It can pass an HD signal straight out of a low-cost HDV camcorder and into a Mac or PC without needing to be compressed into the HDV format. This will be a blessing for users of HDV camcorders that have HDMI ports, such as Sony's just-introduced HDR-FX7. Now, vid-jockeys can edit in uncompressed HD without the need for more expensive SDI (serial digital interface)-based cameras or decks.

Soooo...I assume that would mean I could use my camera is I have a workstation...but I don't. Do any of you have suggestions/comments about how I could have the same functionality for my MACBook Pro!!! HELP!!!!! I feel like I wasted 900 dollars on a camera that I may only use as a paperweight!

Thanks, --bill

MPB 17in - 3GB Ram - 200 GB Mac OS X (10.4.8) I also have a G5

Posted on May 4, 2007 3:00 AM

Reply
7 replies

May 4, 2007 7:39 PM in response to bdaul

I am pretty sure that the HDV they refer to is the new generation of HD DV cameras not AVCHD.

HD DV is captured through a process of transcoding to a temporary format in slower than real time. This device ( your link is dead as a smelt) presumably does that faster.

The big problem , not atypical of Sony, is that the format is newer than any editors for AVHCD. Even Sony's own Vegas is marginal.

Had you searched here or well, anywhere really, on AVHCD you'd have learned it is uneditable. Hope Final Cut or something else adds a AVHCD codec or process in the future.

I am not sure the Elgato link is an appropriate suggestion, if it is, Abrody should tell you what device. I am not sure any are intended to capture HD video and get it into a mac. I have the Eye 250, it only accepts composite in and the rest of their devices say nothng about HD inputs.

May 4, 2007 10:01 PM in response to Ricktoronto

The link directly to the product:

http://www.blackmagic-design.com/products/intensity/

RICKTORONTO:

Thanks for your note...like I said I am a beginner in this area. It is frustrating to see these international companies produce and sell products that are basically high-tech CRAP. A pin-hole camera has more functionality than the crap Sony and Panasonic dumps on us.

Gee, perhaps the NSA has a codec that I could use.
-
--bill

May 5, 2007 5:33 AM in response to bdaul

EyeTV has a hybrid digital HD TV recorder:

http://www.elgato.com/index.php?file=products_eyetvhybridna

Of course whether you can get the digital signal off the camera into any of the Elgato products without first converting it to analog is the big question. Your best bet is to write to support AT elgato.com and they may be able to tell you if they have a solution that works for your needs.

May 5, 2007 5:11 PM in response to a brody

I had one. It records off air HD by antenna and it broke the first day. It is really flimsy. The breakout box will input standard 480 composite (and S) video and that's it. Not HD. NO firewire, No HDMI, nothing.

They promote the input to let you watch video games on your laptop. Low-D I guess.

Elgato's products ( I am very happy with the 250 which has a hardware MPEG-2 encoder chip) are better defined as TV tuners, allowing the mac to become a PVR for cable or off-air signals.

In other words nothing to connect a AVCHD camera's output which I guess may have HDMI (no idea) to the Hybrid. If you output composite video there is no point in recording HD right?

May 5, 2007 5:15 PM in response to bdaul

Bill, take it back and if you want to shoot HD get one that uses tape and use iMovie or Final Cut/Express. iMovie HD is a great product.

Keep in mind you have no ability to output HD to a DVD to actually play it yet but you can send back to the cameras and play the edited movie from the camera to the TV.

Really the quality of DV (plain old DV) is so very good it would be adequate for quite a while.

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hdmi on my HDC SD1 Panasonic camcorder and MACBook Pro fully loaded

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