I need suggestions for a camcorder around $250 to use when traveling and recording conference speeches and interviews.
February 14, 2008 7:54 AM
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I need suggestions for a camcorder around $250 to use when traveling and recording conference speeches and interviews.
I'm going to be spending a couple weeks in Europe (specifically the Czech Republic, Austria, and Hungary), attending some conferences and doing some sight-seeing.
The camcorder doesn't need to be fancy, it will be recording some conference panels, some one one one interviews mainly, but I doubt I need anything special for things like that.
I'll need to record about 20 hours of video without having the ability to dump the video off the camcorder onto a computer, so hard-drive based camcorders don't seem like an option. I assume MiniDV is the way to go? Any cheap media options are good.
Do most camcorders come with a power brick? Since I live in the US, I'd just want to use an adapter to recharge the camcorder batteries while in Europe.
Also, it needs to have a USB port, I don't have access to FireWire (even though I could probably go get a PCI card for it).
An LCD would also be nice, so I don't have to stare through the viewfinder for hours.
Summary are the requirements:
1. ~$250
2. USB output
3. Power brick?
Any suggestions on specific models or brans would be appreciated.
thanks.
posted by bored to technology (7 comments total)
2 users marked this as a favorite
1. Yes, Mini-DV is the way to go. Most standard Mini-DV cameras will have a USB 2.0 port these days. Firewire is so 2003 (but damn fast!). If you can dump, I'd go with HDD. Waiting for 20 Mini-DV tapes to dump to your PC in real-time (which means about 20 hours) is exhauuuuuusting.
2. Most cameras will come with LCDs. Also consider budgeting (save those arms!) for a tripod and an external mike. (The latter can make rewatching a presentation again go from unbearable to almost pleasant, rent or borrow one if you are really cheap, best investment you can make, I promise. I'll take crappy video and great audio any day.)
3. Your camera's charger may support 110/220, if so, you don't need a convertor, you simply need an adapter. You'll learn this by looking at the "power brick", if it says 110/220, get an adapter, otherwise you'll need a convertor that supplies enough power to the charger.
posted by bprater at 8:01 AM on February 14, 2008