DonO
et al
 
There is a guide/tyer/fisherman/storeowner that has mad some nice videos in N 
Carolina by the name of Jerff Wilkins.He used to be on ebay but now is just 
guiding and selling from his website.  He may be able to assist you with the 
ropedub video and others you feel worthy to share with your legions of fans and 
foes.
 
I am at a borrowed PC so can not get the site down for you but it should be 
easy.
 
DTMay your GOD be your fishing partner.  



 EMAILING FOR THE GREATER GOODJoin me

Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 18:52:26 -0800From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]: [VFB] Re: Was U-tube demo, then rot. vice, now CD technology- new 
thread

Hi DonO,I've dealt with this a little bit, so here's some comments, albeit 
subject to correction by someone more knowledgeable. 

So do I go High Definition or Blue Ray?  Was told that HD lost out to BR like 
Beta lost out to VHS.  Now both Beta and VHS are gone.  Do I get rid of my HD 
player now- I have lots of movies and stuff in HD?  
The rule is: always film in the highest resolution available.  The software is 
capable of converting the files to whatever resolution is needed, ie. Blu-Ray 
or regular DVD.  You cannot film at low resolution and increase the resolution, 
it will just look crappy.Yes, HD-DVD is a dead technology.  If you already have 
a substantial investment in the HD-DVD format, buy an extra HD-DVD player or 
two, because once these disappear, and your machine breaks down, you will have 
no way of directly viewing the video.Blu-Ray DVD drives are beginning to appear 
for PCs.  Some are dual drives, in that they will read Blu-Ray AND regular DVD 
(not HD-DVD) disks.   More and more Blu-Ray players for home theater use also 
have the dual format capability.  

Do I buy a HD video camera (if the players phase out?), or Blue Ray camera for 
the coming technology?  Is Blue-ray just for movies?  But if it takes a 
different player, why not dual players like the VHS/CD players.  Again, it 
seems the collateral damage of the technology wars is my checkbook, along with 
the losing tecnology.
HD-DVD and Blu-Ray are high resolution VIDEO DELIVERY systems, not camera 
systems.  You would be best to buy a HD-capable video camera.  That will 
produce the size of file needed to be high-resolution.  Again, you can always 
sample down a copy of the original file for use to make regular DVD disks, but 
will always have the original high rez file for future happenstances.


 This is flyfishing related, because after I have 2 or 3 videos 'in the can' 
from a professional, I want to start filming my own, thus I need to buy the 
equipment.  But if the viewing public has 3 or 4 viewing technologies, which 
one do I film in and make the investment?  
Answered above. If it were me, I would produce regular format DVDs. 


Are Blue-rays reproducible?  DO THEY PLAY ON COMPUTERS?  Do they convert to 
other technologies or play on lesser machines?  Are there copyright/security 
programs for them to stop pirating?  Would it be better to film in the older 
technology for the majority that have CD libraries already?
All DVDs can be copy protected, but that is an add-on technology provided by 
whoever masters your DVD for mass-production.  Very, very few copy protection 
technologies will defeat an hell-bent DVD-ripper with the right software. 
Blu-Ray is a proprietory format.  A Blu-Ray disk will not play on a non-Blu-Ray 
player.You should minimally use digital sources, such as CDs, for your music 
track.  Analog sources (tapes) will give you noticeably inferior results. 
Record your voice track digitally directly to a hard drive or CD-R.Your key 
purchase will be your video editing software.  I am on a Mac and use Final Cut 
Pro and iMovieHD.  Someone else will have to chime in on the best software if 
you are using a Windows PC. Hope that helps...Wes WadaBend, OR
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