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I have about 9 years of Hi8/Digital 8 tapes which I have done no editing on whatsoever. My son is now 9 and we now have an 8 month old baby girl. So, I am in the market for an HD Camcorder. I want to convert all of my tapes to digital so that I can edit them as well as my new digital video taken from my new camcorder.
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The choices come down to (1) finding a Digital8 camcorder that can play back 8mm/Hi8 tapes, (2) finding a MiniDV (or HD ???) camcorder that accepts analog input (play-through is nice, but even record / rewind / play back will get the job done), or (3) finding a conversion box (a camcorder without the camera or the ability to record).
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If I purchase an HD camera am I going to need an expensive burner that can rip high def disks? I have no clue about this. Also, if I burn a high def disk will it have to be Blue Ray or HD DVD? Will the people I give these to be able to watch them on a standard DVD player? How do I deal with the fact that not everyone has an HDTV or HD DVD player?
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Unless you're going to burn DVD-ROMs to be played back only on computers, creating "HD" discs (with full resolution) for your family/friends will require the entire chain ("filming/recording", "editing", "burning", "playback") to be HD.
I would presume that for people who do not have HD disc playback systems, you will need to burn either standard DVD-Video discs, or DVD-ROM discs with "HD" content that computers with DVD drives can play back. If you are starting with a recording from a HD camcorder, you'll need to "downconvert" the resolution. I would think that some software or hardware packages could do this for you, although I don't know specific ones.