Using high quailty digital camera video?

Hi everyone.
I just got a new digital camera, the Casio EX-S500 and it is a really great camera. The one thing that I am amazed at is how great the video is! I can't tell the difference between a a video camera's footage and my digital cameras footage. When I first got the camera, I had to download a little plug-in thing for Quicktime so that it would play the movie files. I did that... no problems. But when I import the videos into Final Cut Express HD, (the video files are AVI by the way), it will play fine in the Viewer, but when I put it on my timeline, it plays in the canvas the way it did before I got the plug in (A mostly black screen. You can't really make out anything thats happening in the video.) Any suggestions of how I will be able to edit with this?
Thanks a lot.
-Dean

The box of the camera does say that it uses MPEG-4 video, but look at the get info screenshot of one of the files: http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y88/bballerdean/avi.jpg
I understand the whole process of getting MPEG video into Final Cut Express. I have MPEG Streamclip and use it all the time. The problem isn't the audio. It's the image. The audio is fine. Final Cut Express does not use the plug-in that I downloaded for Quicktime.
Here's what I'm talking about.
(In Quicktime)
Without the plug-in: http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y88/bballerdean/2222222222.jpg
With the plug-in: http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y88/bballerdean/4thattempt.jpg
iMac G5   Mac OS X (10.3.9)  

Similar Messages

  • Transfer digital camera videos to ipod

    how can i transfer my digital camera video to the ipod? i can transfer the pictures, but the digital video says it does not support, what can i do?

    Hi Ellen,
    On the Apple website here there are software downloads...look under iPod and you will find one called MoviesForMyPod which i use to convert movie files from my Sony camera. It's free and works a treat.
    Niall

  • Iphoto will not import my photos from my digital camera because it says it is having a problem downloading my photos. I'm using the same digital camera I have always had and have the current version of iphoto and am usuin snowleapord. Any thoughts?

    iphoto will not import my photos from my digital camera because it says it is having a problem downloading my photos. I'm using the same digital camera I have always had and have the current version of iphoto and am using snowleapord 10.6.8. Any thoughts?

    As a Test:
    Hold down the option (or alt) key and launch iPhoto. From the resulting menu select 'Create Library'
    Import a few pics into this new, blank library. Is the Problem repeated there?

  • Front Row Photos won't play digital camera videos

    Hi,
    Firstly, I'm pretty new to Macs but have been finding my feet with most of my new toy's functionality. I've encountered one problem that I can't seem to find an answer to and was hoping someone here would be able to help.
    I've used iPhoto to import all of my old photos/videos from my digital camera and have arranged these into a mixture of events and smart-folders. When viewing these via the Photos menu in Front Row, the automatic slideshows play back all my photos just fine, but any videos that were taken at the same time are just shown as a black screen. When I say videos, I mean little video clips that were taken using the digital-camera (640x480 and 30fps).
    A few other bits of info that may help with this;
    - The videos play fine in iPhoto.
    - The black screen appears for the same duration that photos are shown, rather than the length of the video.
    - I created a Movies smart-folder, if I hover the selection over this item within Front Row, I'm shown a slideshow of the initial frame of the videos contained within.
    - The camera is a Canon Powershot A700 which stores videos as AVIs using the MJPEG format.
    Am I trying to do something silly? Should the Photos section of Front Row not be used for video playback? Its a shame if that is the case, as they're memories of that event.
    However, the fact that Front Row shows the black screen where the video should be gives me the impression that it is attempting to play it. Otherwise I would expect it to ignore all non-image file formats.
    Any help with this would be hugely appreciated.
    Cheers,
    Ian

    Hi,
    With a bit of additional searching I seem to have found an answer to my question. Unfortunately it's not the answer I wanted and this seems to be a known issue. The post I found that describes this is here;
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1380562&tstart=0
    I'll be raising it in the feedback form.
    Cheers,
    Ian
    Message was edited by: Ecnarfi
    URL Corrected
    Message was edited by: Ecnarfi

  • Sound with mgp digital camera video clips

    I cannot get the sound onto my ipod, the Video clips from my digital camera are fine and play fine, but no sound

    Hi bj1,
    First off, are these video clips in a compatible format for your iPod? They will have to be in either one of these formats:
    M4V, MP4, or MOV
    If it is in one of those formats, then let's proceed onto resetting your iPod. To reset an iPod:
    First, toggle your iPod's "Hold" switch back and forth a couple of times (make sure that you leave it on the white side of the switch, which is "Off")
    Then, press and hold the Menu and Select (center) buttons together for 5-10 seconds.
    You might need to try this several times before it ever ends up working for you.
    For more effect when you reset an iPod, you could try connecting your iPod to a power source, like a wall charger or your computer's USB, while you reset the iPod.
    If resetting doesn't seem to do anything, then I would suggest that you try reconverting these video files using a third-party program.
    For example, you could use MPEG Streamclip, which I have heard is good, and not buggy software.
    After you've converted those video files, delete the old ones off your iPod, and reload the video clips (the newly converted ones) onto your iPod again.
    Does it work now after trying that?
    -Kylene

  • Digital camera video = memory card

    What is the best kind of memory card for videos ( making a video on a digital camera) & how many GBs should i consider on getting?

    Hi TechGirl,
    There is no specific type of memory card that works best for video, but I can suggest getting a memory card that has a higher storage capacity like a 4-8GB card with a high write speed. I hope this helps!
    Thanks for posting,
    Allan
    Community Connector
    Best Buy® Corporate
    Allan|Senior Social Media Specialist | Best Buy® Corporate
     Private Message

  • Importing digital camera video to iPhoto

    I have a Canon DiMAGE X50 digital camera I dearly love. It works very well with my iMac 10.4.4.
    However, iPhoto won't accept any video I've recorded that's longer than maybe 60 seconds.
    I can record up to 30 minutes on my Canon. I've got a great 3 minute clip of the Seahawks NFC championship game that won't transfer to iPhoto.
    Is there some extra trick I need to do?
    Thanks for any help.

    Hi Arniviking,
    the trick is to use Image Capture.
    When iPhoto 5 first came out I really think it was programmed to import the smaller 30 sec video clips that cameras were taking at the time. Since then, digital cameras, at least my Canon S2 can take clips as large as your memory card can hold. The first time I tried to download my images and movie clips with my new camera, iPhoto stalled at the movie clips. I wasn't going to take any chances messing up my iPhoto Library so I started using Image Capture to download all my images and Movie clips. I actually like doing it this way a lot better. My movie clips are downloaded into my Movies folder where I then put them in a dated folder.
    My photos are downloaded into my Pictures folder, where I then put them in a dated folder. I import the dated folder into iPhoto. I also keep all dated folders from photo downloads in the Pictures folder till I get enough Movie folders and Photo folders to fill a DVD. I burn them and then delete them from the hard drive.
    This way I have the photos in iPhoto and I also have just the photos backed up to DVD.
    The Movies I keep on the hard drive in their dated folders until I use all the clips for my iMovie projects for the Year. I then make sure they are all burned to DVD, then I delete those from my hard drive.
    Using Image Capture to download images and video clips:
    Open up Image Capture which is found in the Applications folder.
    When it is opened, go to Image Capture/Preferences
    Under the General button choose
    Camera: When a camera is connected, open Image Capture.
    The next time you connect your camera Image Capture will open.
    In the window that opens you will see an Options button. Click on that button to set your options.
    To find out more about Image Capture (it can do a lot more) Click on Help in the menu bar when Image Capture is open.
    iPhoto: How to Change the "Open Automatically" Preference
    If you find you can't change any of Image Captures preferences or can't access any drop down menus or they are greyed out, check to make sure Image Capture is loose in the Applications folder and not within a sub folder.

  • Camcorder vs. Digital Camera Video Mode

    Hi,
    I'm a newbie and I'm hoping this forum can help me. I have a Canon ZR45 Camcorder (18x Optical Zoom/ 360X Digital Zoom) (Yes, it's about 4yrs old) and a Canon SD750 that takes 30 fps VGA with a max 640x480 size.
    I took a video of my new baby just playing around using both. In my mind, I would have thought the camcorder would have had better quality when played back in iMovie but when I looked at the clips side by side, the video from the Digital Camera looked much better and crisper. The camcorder video was pretty blurry. I cannot make sense of comparing the 18x optical zoom info of the camcorder as that is all i have to go by with it to anything more specific in terms of fps or resolution size.
    Has the digital video gotten that much better over the years? I'm all for carrying as little as possible. Any comparison to newer camcorders in terms of overall quality?
    Sorry for the long story, but thanks so much in advance!
    Jason

    Digital camera's video feature has improved considerably. If you simply compare the video on the codec level many of today's digi-cams have better quality than aging DV format. But that is only part of the story.
    TV vs Computer - If you shoot video for TV playback on mind, DV would probably yield better result because it is designed for TV and not computer displays, which is why they look bad on computers than on TV. Two have very different color and gamma characteristics. Conversely, to make digicam videos good on TV proper color correction should be done, or they tend to look too contrasty and harsh.
    Motion rendering - Most digi cam videos shoot 30 progressive frames per second while DVs shoot 30 interlaced frames (or 60 fields) per second, so the motion rendering is smoother on DV.
    Maunal control - Digital cameras have few if at all manual control for exposure or shutter speed of your video.
    Zoom - Most DV cams at least have 10x optical zoom, while digital cameras olny have 3~5x optical zoom.
    Audio - From built in microphone's quality to audio recording format, DV's audio is superior to digicam's mono low quality audio.
    Accessorizing - Camorders have common threads (43mm, 72mm, etc) where you can screw in various filters or conversion/wide angle lens.
    Portability and quick snap-ablity - pocket digital cams truly shine for this and maybe it's all needed. With your camera in the pocket you will have much better chance of capturing the moment of your baby's first step. Just make sure you have large memory card in it.
    Perhaps camera like Sanyo's xacti HD700 would be a good hybrid. It is a digital camera with the stress on movie function than still image.
    Message was edited by: Euisung Lee

  • Novice here...  my digital cam videos were in iphoto- now gone?

    when I first opened iMovie all my videos that I took with my digital camera (and that are currently viewable in iphoto with my photos) were in the lower right corner of the screen in iMovie.  Now all of a sudden they are gone.  I had a One on One and the mentor taught me how to edit my movies.  When the session first started all the videos were there and when the sesson ended, they were there.  Now that I shut down and restarted my laptop, they are gone.  I thought I'd try it myself tonight.  Can someone please help?  Thank you in advance

    M4V is a container for h.264 movies. You may have iTunes set as the default application for the m4v extension.
    You can chenge the default app to QuickTime Player if you like. Right-click on the m4v file and select Get Info.
    You can change the application under OPEN WITH to QuickTime Player. If you want to do this for all m4v's, click Change All.
    If you want to usually use iTunes, but sometimes use QuickTime Player, you can right click on the m4v and click Open With.../QuickTime Player.
    The M4v will work fine for most purposes, but if you prefer to use an .mov container, you can SHARE/EXPORT USING QUICKTIME. Choose Movie to QuickTime Movie, and for the codec choose h.264.

  • Transfering digital camera video onto the ipad

    how do i get videos on taken with my digital camera to upload on to my ipad

    Launch iMovie with your digital camera connected - assuming the video captured by the camera remains on the camera. At the iMovie menu bar, go to File and select Import From Camera. Or go to Import > Movies followed by navigating to the movie file already imported by your Mac.
    You can make adjustments to the video with iMovie. With the "Project" selected, at the iMovie menu bar go to Share and select iTunes. You will be provided various size options. You will select Medium or Large - the largest size available to be Apple TV compatible. Or you can use the Export Movie option with various options available for the export. Choose the largest for Apple TV. After the export is completed, import or transfer the exported file to iTunes.

  • Putting Digital Camera Videos onto Ipod?

    Is this possible? And if so how do I do it? I was told I'd need to convert them, but I haven't the slightest clue how.
    I'm using a Mac with a 160 Gig iPod classic

    If it's a digital camcorder you are talking about, it will be a little more difficult to do what you want to do. But if you're just talking about a digital camera which has a video recording function in it, it should be a lot easier.
    First you have to check the file format (file name extension), i.e. is it .avi , .mpg , or anything else. Assuming you may not be able to see it right on the file name iteself (because sometimes the extensions are hidden from view). If you can't see the extension, just ctrl-click the file which you imported from your camera to your mac, click "Get Info", you can either read the extension under "Name & Extension", or just read the file format (kind) under "General" where it says what "kind" of a file it is.
    As far as I know, most DC's record .avi videos. You could either use Quick Time Pro (which costs a little of your money, or if you have Pro applications like Logic or Final Cut Studio, it is free). Even if the file is not AVI, you can still use Quick Time Pro for the conversion, as long as it's not .wmv (which you will need to buy a plug-in), or anything extremely peculiar. Open the video file with QT Pro, and go to File>Export, then choose Movie to iPod. And there's your converted video file which you can import into iTunes. (I'm not sure if a regular Quick Time Player, which is free and should already be on your mac, has the Export function as well, because I have the Pro for a long time and forget what the regular version is like).
    The good thing about QT Pro is that you can do some simple editing to your video, i.e. cut, copy and paste a specified portion of the video. And these functions are pretty useful on the most basic level.
    If you don't want to spend money on Quick Time Pro, or if the file format is something that QT Pro can't convert or even open, here's what you can do. Let say the file extension is .xyz, you can use Google, or whatever search engine you use, and search for "convert .xyz to iPod" or something like that. There are bound to be a few free software, or free trials, that you can download. Try those.
    There. That's about everything you need to know for converting videos into iPod formats.
    Message was edited by: Leiya Lee
    Message was edited by: Leiya Lee

  • Invalid public movie atom with digital camera videos?

    I've shot videos with my digital camera, uploaded through iPhoto and edited on iMovie HD before
    but a couple weeks ago I have not been able to upload on IPhoto:
    Open on Quicktime:
    Or edit on iMovie HD:
    My least concern right now is being able to watch these videos because I can view them on the VLC player.
    I urgently need to edit them on iMovie HD for class projects and want to know why this "Invalid public movie atom" came out from nowhere.
    Can it be fixed? I am desperate for help with some videos I shot today in class because I need to edit them for Tuesday
    Thank you!

    I'm afraid I can't be of much help, except to tell you what the error means...
    It means that at a very low level, something is messed up in your movie.
    A QuickTime movie is made up of a heirarchy of containers, called "atoms". Atoms come in two varieties: atoms may contain other atoms, or they may contain data. The first four bytes of the atom give tthe length of the atom in bytes, the next four give the name of the atom, and the rest of the bytes are the data carried by that atom: either raw data or more atoms. The error is telling you that the structure of the movie is wrong, that the actual file does not match its description.
    If you are truly lucky, then the problem is an invalid length specification for the top level "moov" atom. Normally, the first four bytes of a QuickTime movie give the length of the moov atom, which is equal to the total length of the file. Try making a copy of the movie and opening the copy with a hex editor. If the first four bytes are not the same as the length of the file, try fixing them and see if that repairs the movie. If not, then the problem is deeper and/or more complicated.
    WARNING: Perform surgery ONLY on COPIES of your movies!
    --Dave Althoff, Jr.

  • Digital Cameras - Video

    Does anyone know if a digital camera with MPEG-VX will import into iMovie with both the video and audio?
    The Help-menu only mentions importing MPEG-1 (video only) and MPEG-4 (video & audio).
    Thanks.

    Hi Maritess,
    welcome tot his forum
    I learn every day on this forum new "standards"... mpeg-vx seems to be an invention of Sony, for storing small video-clips done with a still-cam...
    the usual tool is Streamclip, in case it is a mpeg1 flavor... reading some posts concerning that -vx format in some PC forums makes me wonder, wether SC accept THAT file-format, I'm afraid, Sony cooks again its own soup (=proprietary format).
    try the Image capture app in your utilities folder to download the file on your mac and give SC a try (it is free)....
    besides:
    iMovie is an edit app meant to work with firewire-connected mini-dv-camcorders.

  • Digital camera video importing as photos :(

    I lost my daughter 's  hula  recital   I filmed on a panasonic digital camera.  I lost the cable to import the photos and avi video, so I transfered the SD card to a canon powershot to import into iphoto.  Doing this caused the video to be imported as a jpg.  Why?  I've shot video with the canon.  Now instead of footage, I have stills.  Is there anyway to see if the video information is retrievable?  I deleted all off the SD card not knowing this bogus transfer happened. 

    Info shows that all photos are jpeg.  I double click and see a photo with out the opportunity to play/pause.
    I did a test here are home:
    1.  Recorded 10 minutes of video in the panasonic digital camera
          1a.  Viewed the video in the camera and it is indeed video
    2.  Moved the card to the Canon camera (because I have the cable to import with that camera; lost cable for panasonic)
    Imported "video" into iphoto
    3.  Viewed in iphoto
    4.  Image is a jpeg still not avi video
    Good advice not to delete the images on the card from iphoto, but I had success for years. 
    Thx.

  • Is Aperture Useful with unsupported digital cameras like FujiFilm S100FS?

    I have been evaluating and comparing Apple Aperture with Adobe Lightroom. For me, Aperture would be my preference if my camera was supported. Note that I already am using Photoshop CS5, but could use the supplemental organizing capabilityies of Aperture.
    Apple does not support my camera's raw format (Fujifilm Finepix S100FS). To make matters worse, it does no good to convert the raw files to the standard DNG format because Apple does not even support that format for this camera. Apple states that some cameras are not supported in DNG because they have different types of sensor. And one of the reasons I purchased the Fujifilm camera is that it sports a larger sensor (to capture more light).
    Aperture does support TIFF files, however. So I considered the idea of converting files to TIFF before importing them into Aperture. An interesting aspect of this is that TIFF files tend to be very very large.
    For example, compare the following file sizes (for the same photo):
    Camera Raw direct from the camera (16 bits per pixel): 23.7 MB
    Converted to very high quality JPEG (8 bits): 7.9 MB
    Converted to TIFF using Finepix software (16 bits) 133.3 MB
    Converted to TIFF with Esif using Finepix S/W (8 bits) 66.7 MB
    Converted to TIFF using Adobe Photoshop (8 bits) 33.2 MB
    Converted to CNG using Adobe DNG Converter (16 bits) 31.9 MB
    It appears that the best route may be to use the Photoshop conversion to TIFF. But I would be concerned that the reduction from 16 to 8 bits may limit my ability to do extensive editing without ending up with high pixelizing results. One can see that working with the camera raw image would provide greater flexibility and use less disk space - if only it was supported.
    I like the features of Apple Aperture. But, I am not willing to pay the price associated with the lack of camera support. I think that Aperture would be an asset to me if it was not for this great shortcoming. I am not currently interested in Lightroom 2 since it is a couple of years old and does not support sound and movie files to the same extent as Aperture. I may be able to use the sound organizational capabilities of Aperture since music is also one of my hobbies.
    Has anyone else run into this type of problem? Is there something that I am missing? Is Aperture at all useful for a person with a camera that is not supported by Apple?
    Message was edited by: Kelvinband

    I guess the answer is digital is new and there is a lot of fighting for the Top Spot.
    The way i figured things out was like this.
    Best tool to do the job is what i wanted. What works for me, because i don't want to work for a computer or a camera. (but i have to) When i started looking i found Apple were the ones who seemed to make something that came nearest to working for me and not the other way round.
    Of course Aperture is still very useful as it is a mega powerful Organisation tool.
    If i were in your position now i would think new camera. Aperture will still be around long after your camera and hopefully getting better along the way. The camera won't, thats for sure.
    A possible short, half term solution if Apple intend to support it in the near future. Would be import pairs then discard the jpegs when raw is supported.
    Sorry probably not the answer you wanted.
    Allan

Maybe you are looking for

  • How long should upgrade to Yosemite take?

    I have downloaded Yosemite from the AppStore and on my initial attempt to install got to the point of having a grey screen with apple in the middle and a progress bar which stopped about 1/4th the way to completion.  I let it run overnight after read

  • Thoroughly confused about supported resolutions using MDP to VGA adapter

    I've read many posts on the topic and I still have no idea what is correct. Some people claim the max res for this adapter is 1600x1200 while others claim they are getting 1920x1200 with it. I have a 24" HP LCD that has VGA and HDMI as the input choi

  • How do i enable the job in OWB?

    i have job scheduled in OWB. The job is not automatically kicking off. Here is the status. SQL> select state,enabled from dba_scheduler_jobs where owner='IAEBT_DW' and job_name='PF_JOB'; 2 STATE ENABLED DISABLED FALSE SQL> SQL> EXEC DBMS_SCHEDULER.EN

  • Problem in executing beans in j2sdkee1.2.1

    I have an email application which uses a bean called webmailbean.java. I could successfully execute this mail application under java webserver2.0 but it fails under j2sdkee1.2.1 server. I have kept this bean in a package called test and placed this b

  • Flash file types

    what's the difference between a project, a flash file or an swf file?