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can't import or make a movie

neil falgiano Posted Jul 23, 2009

import or make a movie

I have vista basic on my computer and have a JVC camcorder model gz-mg57u...i was given "Cyberlink Power2 go and Navigator Ver 1.5, which has DVD,Director express and Producer 3" loaded it all and it won't import form camera. tryed windows movie maker, won't happen either, went to Cyberlink and downloaded every update there, still nothing!GOT SO FUSTRATED, went out and bought a JVC burner model cu-vd10u, bought Maxell dvd-r 4.7 dvd dics to burn..tells me dics are not compatible!!!!!! Hardly ever use burner, burnt 2 dics about a year ago....its only use. and now its complaining about the dics!!! THIS CAMERA AND BURNER NOTHING BUT PROBLEMS, WILL NEVER BUY OR RECOMEND JVC TO ANY ONE ..WHAT JUNK

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    The very fact that the model you refer to does not have a standard DVi output socket says it all really, as this model in my opinion was one of JVC's bad ideas of trying to jump on the hard disc bandwagon before a system was perfected, hence they have come up with a model that attracts many complaints due to its incompatibility problems with standard systems, and with this even as you have already discovered, extending to it being critical on what brand of DVD it will burn. To be quite honest about it, in most cases when dealing with "standard" video it much easier to transfer the video onto a DVD recorder (even cheap types) using the DVD recorders AV input sockets, as you can select the known quality of burn you want. Always select the second best record quality on the DVD, as when transferring video from normal camcorders the difference between first and second is just not noticeable, although in many instances if the video is known to run less than one hour (before editing) you could choose to use the max quality burn to keep pristine video quality, albeit of course that any difference that "might" be noticed over the standard two hour burn is very likely to be of a psychological nature, as any differences that would exist is guaranteed to be of an absolutely fractional nature. Needless to say once the DVD is made you then play it on the PC to import it into some video manipulation programme for editing, the task now being made much easier as the DVD recorder has already reduced the massive file sizes that you can get if taken straight from the camcorder. The purists might try to maintain that using the camcorders A/V connections takes away from the so called perfect digital copying, however the end result of using a DVD recorder transfer will have very little difference (if any!) to what would have been achieved using pure digital transfer, and in many cases exceeds it as a pure digital transfer is not always as perfect as some would would like to imagine due to domestic DVD recorders usually having more acceptable video compression techniques than what's experienced when using some types of video manipulation software.

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