Wednesday, December 25, 2013

What is a good, reliable outdoor video camera?

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atreyufan4


I'm looking for a fairly strong, waterproof outdoor camera than can video underwater and pick up great audio/video in every condition. INCLUDING DURING THE NIGHT! From the top of a mountain to deep sea fishing. I do a lot of hiking, backpacking and fishing and want to start filming my adventures. Ideas please! Ideally the camera will be light, compact and have easily changeable/rechargeable batteries. I have very little photography/videography experience and was hoping to keep the price tag under $500.


Answer
GoPro HERO3: Black Edition is best for your requirement. GoPro HERO3 are the best and widely used for underwater video making. GoPro HERO3: Black Edition is smaller in size and lighter in weight which helps you for good grip. Its price is also under your budget. The following link will give you the more detailed and professional reviews about this camera

http://www.amazon.com/review/R1H2QAHEZ055YN/ref=cm_cr_pr_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B009TCD8V8&linkCode=&nodeID=&tag=tawerh-20

It has advanced features like Versatile shooting modes for pros, More detail in brightly-lit areas with Wi-Fi built in. It has Lighter and smaller & Reduced fogging in the housing

How can I keep my audio and video in sync?

Q. I have a 'Kodak Play sport' waterproof film camera that I have recently been trying to film on. The film quality is brilliant, and the audio quality fairly good, but only on the camera. When I import it onto my computer, the audio and video in both WMP (Windows Media Player) and WMM (Windows Movie Maker).
Any suggestions on how I can:
a) Remove audio lag using WMM.
b) Stop audio lag altogether on my camera.
c) Suggest an alternative free media editing suite to do a) with.
Thanks,
MiJ.


Answer
Clarification: You are "filming". There is no *film* involved. The digital video (and audio) device you are using captures video.

As you indicated during playback, the audio and video are in synch. When the media file is transferred to the computer, the audio and video are not in synch. This symptom (also sometimes referred to as being "glitchy", is *usually* due to the computer for one or more of the following reasons:

* The computer's CPU is underpowered for dealing with the video recorded.
* The media player cannot deal with the video.
* The computer does not have enough RAM.
* The computer does not have enough available hard drive space.
* The computer is doing other work using CPU cycles that the video needs to play properly.

For playback only, try VLC player from http://www.videolan.org/ as it is more robust than WMP. As for editors - in the Windows environment, Sony Vegas usually floats to the top... But not knowing the computer environment makes this a SWAG...




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Title Post: What is a good, reliable outdoor video camera?
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