Originally posted by: gsellis
Pinnacle Systems Studio AV/DV Version 9 Video Editing Kit is $100 at Best Buy. Comes with an AV/DV card and software.
Edit - A video card is not enough. You have to capture the video and audio. You would plug the component cables from the Out ports on a VHS deck to the In on the card, then capture in the software. The software and hardware convert the files to AVI (DV2) or MPEG2. You can then cut, title, edit, enhance, and burn to DVD (with a DVD burner). The only video cards that breaks that rule is the All-In-Wonder series and the equivalent from nVidia.
edit-edit- component, composite - jeez, always getting those backwards.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: gsellis
Pinnacle Systems Studio AV/DV Version 9 Video Editing Kit is $100 at Best Buy. Comes with an AV/DV card and software.
Edit - A video card is not enough. You have to capture the video and audio. You would plug the component cables from the Out ports on a VHS deck to the In on the card, then capture in the software. The software and hardware convert the files to AVI (DV2) or MPEG2. You can then cut, title, edit, enhance, and burn to DVD (with a DVD burner). The only video cards that breaks that rule is the All-In-Wonder series and the equivalent from nVidia.
edit-edit- component, composite - jeez, always getting those backwards.
Uh, you're still backwards. Video cards take an S-Video or composite in (composite is AKA 'RCA' cables, the white-yellow-red connectors for audio and video that most non-HD TVs, VCRs, and cable boxes use). Component (YPbPr) is used for HDTV, and there are (AFAIK) no PC component capture cards available (at least not in the consumer market) right now.
Originally posted by: Richard98
Save yourself a lot of time and convince your friend to purchase a set top DVD Recorder. I tried the capture route with an AIW card and it's a VERY time consuming process. A decent used/refurbed Panasonic recorder can be had on ebay for $200