Thanks...

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "francisco_daum" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Depending on your available hard disk space, I would just digitize the
> DV tapes en masse. Just leave the camera importing into iMovie and go
> do something else in the meantime. When it is done, just save the
> imported tape as DV 1 (or some other file name). Save and close.
> 
> Then go to Finder, delete the iMovie .plist file. Open iMovie again
> and digitize the next DV tape and so on.
> 
> My idea is to have the DV tapes readily available on your computer.
> Finder will play the .DV files. Whenever you want to create something,
> you can just use Finder to pick the file you need to import from
> inside iMovie.
> 
> Really depends on your available hard disk space, you can always read
> them off a Firewire external drive....
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "joshgrot" <jgrotstein@> wrote:
> >
> > I've got a large number of hour-long digital video tapes of my family 
> > sitting on the shelf.  I'd like to share key clips of these with my 
> > family and friends, but am turned off by the hassle of culling through 
> > each tape manually to find the most interesting clips (it seems that 
> > 80% of the time, the camera is just rolling and my kids aren't doing 
> > anything too interesting to anyone else but me and my wife).  Is there 
> > an easy way to solve this online, i.e., without having to use 
> > iMovieHD?  VideoEgg?  Apologies if this question has been asked and 
> > answered earlier.
> >
>






 
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