good video capture hardware = ?

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,745
7,307
136
I've been using Pinnacle Studio 8 as my main movie editor. The hardware it came with is pretty good - a PCI card with a breakout box for composite and s-video. The software itself is decent too, but it's INCREDIBLY buggy. Crash crash crash crash crash. Then I lost my discs, but I still have the hardware, so oh well.

So, I want to try something different. Maybe Vegas or something. But what's good video capture hardware? I still have some tapes I want transfer to DVD, and add some titles and stuff as well. While I'm at it, what's some good, non-Pinnacle video editing software?
 

warcrow

Lifer
Jan 12, 2004
11,078
11
81
Get Studio 9 Pro or whatever is called (the newest one out) and a Dazzle. I have a Dazzle DV150 and it works great for capturing. I mena, thats the simple and logic upgrade. If you're willing to suffer a steep learning curve and pay more money, Liquid Edition 5.5 (6 is on its way) and is much much more powerful. Its the equivolent of Adobe Premier.
 

igowerf

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2000
7,697
1
76
I recently got Adobe Premiere Elements. It offers capture capability, editing, and DVD authoring. Amazon has it for $95-ish minus a $20 rebate. You can probably use it with your capture card.
 
Oct 19, 2000
17,860
4
81
I have the AverMedia DVD EZMaker USB2.0. I've had it for about 6 months now, but I've only used it once. But that one time it worked great. I even used it on a comp that had lower specs than their system requirements. At the time, it sucked because my main comp was more than able to run over their requirements, but when I got the thing, it had a small addition in the back of the manual that said it wasn't compatible with the KT333 chipset (and 1 other). And wouldn't you know it, that's what I had. So it wouldn't work no matter what I did, so I used it on the comp downstairs.