Illovox Media wrote:

Of course it depends upon overall format, "quality" and "experience"
desired, but you can capture on just about anything.  A wall street will
capture, and it will do so on any of its internal drives.  You can capture
via PCMCIA USB or FireWire, via 8 pin serial, via SCSI...whatever.  As for
using Final Cut Pro, You can easily use V.1, probably V.2, Premiere, Movie
Works, etc. etc.

Be skeptical all you want, but even a 3400c can capture and edit
video...heck I do low quality, small frame web stream work on a 1400c via
the rare CardCam pc card and 8 pin Serial.

To discuss all these variables as if FCP4 and Consumer DV were the bars to
judge by is ludicrous, IMHO.  None of these are uncompressed highest
professional quality, but with the AJA Io Firewire box, it is possible for
even a Pismo or Lombard to approach the goal, and here is where you are sort
of on, for the capacity still requires access to a spray of extremely high
speed arrays.  In my opinion, the trick is to figure out what you *can* do
with any given machine/software combo and design your work around the
aesthetic of the medium.  That you we can enjoy the capability of any
equipment.

on 12/17/03 12:44 AM, Mikael Bystr�m at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



Excuse me for being a sceptic, but even if the CPU is 500 mhz in this
case, if there are no FireWire drives used, isn't the chance high that
the internal drive is too slow to do quality capture, even with a good
card? I mean, it has to keep up. Or aren't we implicating DV format video
here? If so, what format and objectives are there?
If you have replaced the drive with a newer, like a Fujitsu, that can
deliver somewhat higher data streams even at 4200 rpms, then it will
probably hold up for iMovie DV stuff. I wouldn't count on FCP working
very well, at least not in its later incarnations. However, as I
understand it video should be on its own disk, which is one reason for
adding FW ports. SCSI is too slow on the powerbooks as far as I know.

If I'd be doing video on a 500 mhz G3, I'd do it like what I described
above and add FW ports witha PCMCIA card, FW external discs and put video
on there.


If you have other experiences with video on wallstreets I'd be most
interested to hear as I have a PDQ, or wallstreet II,  myself.










Hmmmm. . . I'm sure you gotta be dropping frames all over the place !!?

-VDO21 .

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