Monday, January 17, 2011

Sony DCRHC38 digital Video Camera.

  • A photo will capture a special moment in time but it can't hope to do justice to your baby's first steps or lights shimmering across the surface of the Seine.
  • It's occasions such as these that really call for a video camera - but if you're saving up for that holiday to Paris or a new bub is on the way, your budget may not stretch far. When you can't spend thousands on a high-end camcorder but still want good-quality video, consider a miniDV camcorder.
  • MiniDV camcorders are small and light, perfect for one-handed operation. They usually come with powerful zoom lenses, electronic image stabilisation and large LCD screens. But what makes miniDV so special is that you can enjoy a bucket-load of features at an affordable price.
  • You'll find plenty of budget miniDV camcorders priced at about $500 but camcorders that record to DVD tend to cost hundreds more. The cheapest camcorders with a built-in hard drive can cost double the price.
  • The miniDV format isn't new. In fact, you could call it the grandaddy of camcorder technology, having made its debut in the mid-1990s.
  • MiniDV cameras record video to a small cassette tape - that's right, tape - it sounds quaint when you consider there are camcorders that record to DVD, hard drives and even flash memory cards, but there are advantages to good ol' miniDV.


Source : http://www.google.co.in

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