Those who know me as a geek par excellence, owner of lots of hand-held computers (including two different models running Linux – is that geeky enough?) may be surprised that until now I’ve never purchased a camcorder. In part, this is because I mistrust electromechanical devices – the mechanical bits tend to fail – and I’m well aware that I am unlikely to use the device very often. I’m not the kind of guy that has boxes of family photos and videotapes of “precious moments” stored in order to be used as unconventional weapons against unsuspecting visitors. I tend to scurry around looking for a camera right before I head off on vacation, and if I haven’t transferred all of the pictures to my computer the day I get home they’re likely to languish in the camera in the closet until next time.
But enough of that. Inspired by a crude video that my son-in-law took at my father-in-law’s 80th birthday bash, I have acquired a Mini-DV camcorder, a Panasonic PVGS9.It cost $349, plus a FireWire cable and some tapes. Circuit City threw in a tripod and a camera bag. The tripod is nice (but will I remember where I put it when I need it?), the camera bag is useless. It was designed for the last generation of camcorders but one; this baby is tiny (3.38 x 2.75 x 4.38 inches). It would be lost in the bag.
While charging the battery, I read the manual. There are dozens of weird and wonderful effects built in, none of which I will ever use. I plan to suck the video straight into my PowerBook and edit it using iMovie (which has wonderful effects and simple drag-and-drop composition, editing, sound track addition, transitions, and so forth). Then I’ll burn it to DVD using iDVD, which will allow me to do the titling, menus, etc. A simple test suggests that I should be able to edit, title, and render a simple 30 minute video in around an hour, which feels like the right input-output ratio. The camera did its job really well: nothing unexpected happened, it just worked. I’ll let you know how it goes.