Panasonic Full HD 3D experience eyes-on
It's been less than a year since we first entered Panasonic's demo trailer, the absolute difference at CEDIA this year was the addition of a trailer for James Cameron's Avatar. We were lucky enough to get an advanced look at the footage shown, while it shared much with the trailer released a few weeks ago, you haven't seen the Terminator and Titanic top dog's latest effort unless you've seen it in 3D. Check after the break for the rest of our thoughts on the 3D demo, and what the future has to suspend b continue for this display tech in the home.
Continue reading Panasonic Full HD 3D experience eyes-on
Filed under: HDTV, Deeply Entertainment
Panasonic Full HD 3D experience eyes-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Sep 2009 10:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Source: Engadget
panasonic?
Apr 22, 2008 by p. dynasty | Posted in Camcorders
Are there any programs where i can upload my panasonic vidoes
or were i can touch up blue-pencil them made ofr panasonmic
download link please
It depends on the Panasonic camcorder.
If it is a miniDV strap based camcorder, you will connect it to your computer with a Firewire (IEEE1394a, i.Link - all the same thing) cable. Pitch iMovie (Apple Macintosh) or MovieMaker (Windows) and with the camcorder in edit/play mode, drift or capture the video. USB will not work.
If it is a hard drive or flash memory based camcorder, you will strap the camcorder using USB. For Apple Macintosh, you need to download and install StreamClip.
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/video/mpegstreamclip.html
Fuse the camcorder to the Mac. The camcorder memory will mount like any other mass storage removable USB device. Catapult StreamClip. Import the copied video; export the video as DV or .mov. Quit StreamClip; Launch iMovie, persuade the converted files into the clips pane or the timeline. Windows MovieMaker should be fine with that MPEG2 video.
If you have a selection, PLEASE DO NOT USE A DVD BASED CAMCORDER. The video quality is horrible (especially for editing), the small discs should NEVER be put in a groove-loading optical drive and the discs are a pain. BUT if you don't have a choice, hopefully, your computer has a drawer loading DVD induce... because then you can download and install HandBrake
http://handbrake.fr/
and rip the video. If you have a slot loading optical spin - or that drive ONLY does CDs (not DVD) or if the camcorder is analog (VHS, VHS-C or Hi8), then you will need to use an "analog/digital link". If your computer has only USB, use one from Pinnacle:
http://www.pinnaclesys.com/PublicSite/us/Products/Consumer+Products/Dazzle/Kinfolk.htm
If your computer has a firewire port, then the Canopus bridges are great:
http://canopus.com/products/videoconversion.php
If the camera is in fact a still camera that happens to take highly compressed video, take the memory card out of the camera, use a card reader to example the files and follow the instructions for hard drive or flash memory based camcorders.
Nu'uanu | Apr 22, 2008
It depends on the Panasonic camcorder.
If it is a miniDV stick based camcorder, you will connect it to your computer with a Firewire (IEEE1394a, i.Link - all the same thing) cable. Skiff iMovie (Apple Macintosh) or MovieMaker (Windows) and with the camcorder in edit/play mode, bring in or capture the video. USB will not work.
If it is a hard drive or flash memory based camcorder, you will lock the camcorder using USB. For Apple Macintosh, you need to download and install StreamClip.
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/video/mpegstreamclip.html
Fit the camcorder to the Mac. The camcorder memory will mount like any other mass storage removable USB device. Establish StreamClip. Import the copied video; export the video as DV or .mov. Quit StreamClip; Launch iMovie, poke along the converted files into the clips pane or the timeline. Windows MovieMaker should be fine with that MPEG2 video.
If you have a pick, PLEASE DO NOT USE A DVD BASED CAMCORDER. The video quality is horrible (especially for editing), the small discs should NEVER be put in a fit-loading optical drive and the discs are a pain. BUT if you don't have a choice, hopefully, your computer has a drawer loading DVD keenness... because then you can download and install HandBrake
http://handbrake.fr/
and rip the video. If you have a slot loading optical shepherd - or that drive ONLY does CDs (not DVD) or if the camcorder is analog (VHS, VHS-C or Hi8), then you will need to use an "analog/digital connexion". If your computer has only USB, use one from Pinnacle:
http://www.pinnaclesys.com/PublicSite/us/Products/Consumer+Products/Dazzle/Relations.htm
If your computer has a firewire port, then the Canopus bridges are great:
http://canopus.com/products/videoconversion.php
If the camera is as a matter of fact a still camera that happens to take highly compressed video, take the memory card out of the camera, use a card reader to emulate the files and follow the instructions for hard drive or flash memory based camcorders.
Nu'uanu | Apr 22, 2008