Camcorder for a mac
Hi, first of all, I did do a search!
just didn't find an answer and technology has a weird habit of advancing anyway.
Ok, now we have an 'old' iMac 20" PPC and need a new camcorder so we can register what my lovely kids can do when they are not so lovely...
Now, what is a good camcorder? What is the best system ? Tape, HD, DVD?
dvd recorders seem not compatible, most HD neither... but I don't want to 'go back' to tapes either... advice very much appreciated

Ok, now we have an 'old' iMac 20" PPC and need a new camcorder so we can register what my lovely kids can do when they are not so lovely...
Now, what is a good camcorder? What is the best system ? Tape, HD, DVD?
dvd recorders seem not compatible, most HD neither... but I don't want to 'go back' to tapes either... advice very much appreciated

Comments
Ex. It has all the features you want but produces terible image quality since it has a poor lense or looks bad in all but ideal lighting condidtions.
Higher cost: Canon mini DV tape based HD camcorder in the $3,000 range
I don't particularly care for Sony or Panasonic (or most of the other manufacturers, for that matter).
http://www.dvformat.com/articles/vie...e.jsp?id=20961
http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/index.php
http://www.dv.com
Transfer to the computer is at real-time (due to the tape format), but otherwise, it works great and interfaces seamlessly with the mac/iLife.
I love the camera though, the DVDrop app works great especially on the fly. It isn't as great that directly copying the files, but it is better than a firewire import from a tape.
Sensible cost: Canon mini DV tape based camcorder in the $600-$1000 range
Higher cost: Canon mini DV tape based HD camcorder in the $3,000 range
The $3k unit is pretty much a pro unit.
There is something in between. Canon's HV10 is a very compact HDV (HiDef on miniDV tapes) camcorder for $1200-$1400. The video quality is outstanding and it works fine with Macs. It doesn't seem to have a mic-in jack though, but I will try to dig into the manual to see if the AV-in jack can be used as a mic-in in conjunction with the HD video sensor, but I don't have much hope. I might have to use some form of external audio recorder. I do have a Sony HC1, which was the first HD consumer camcorder (IMO, FX1 was way too expensive and large to be considered for consumer use), with an XLR converter, but had to resort to the HV10 when I was recording how to make a quick mod to the HC1.
If you plan on doing a decent amount of filming then the capture time gets tiresome really quickly. Imagine a birthday party that is 5 hours+. You then have to set up the computer to capture all that in real-time.
You might want to look at flash based camcorders for ultimate portability and battery life:
http://www.engadget.com/2006/01/12/s...0l-and-sc-x20/
If it's H264 then you should have no trouble editing it on a Mac.
if you looking for affoardable HD Canon HV10 and Sony HC3 are the ones to look at. If you looking at shooting in SD, I'm not quite sure maybe something in the panasonic pv-gs series like the gs500.
I don't follow SD camcorders and don't even follow anything lower than prosumer but I was looking at the HV10 and HC3 for vacations and BTS stuff of my projects.
Most vid cams now are pretty good. My photo cams are Canon, but for video I use Panasonic and Sony (total of three cams), not necessarily due to choice but rather they were on sale cheap. They work great and the finished products are fantastic coming out of iMovie.
HD is good if you want to print individual pictures from the movie; the higher quality per shot pays off here, but if you have a photo cam, you don't really need HD IMO.
Tape has worked fine for me so far. Really, no complaint... but yeah, I'd hoped
to buy something nexgen so to speak hehe
It's only for home use really, so nothing too fancy is needed.
Thanks for the input so far!! It is highly appreciated