- Nov 20, 2009
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My wife works for the University of System of Georgia. She teaches science at one of the Atlanta universities (+20 years). Her classes have always been traditional, but the USofGA instituted a two-week cancellation of all classes while they force faculty to move their in-class instruction to online only. So here is my problem:
Wife wants me to video record her lectures that she'll do from the classroom as normal, and then post the videos on the university system for students to access as they do with other materials. At first this seems like an easy thing. I have a Canon 5d MkIII but I have never done video with it. Nor do I have any video-editing software. My photography, which is personal not professional, doesn't require the horsepower that video-editing needs. Also, I know devices that are not classified as video recorders are limited to recording time (I think 30 min). I know I can get my camera to save to SD/CF in MPEG form (don't know which gen), which is compressed, but I do know this should require RAW output to external storage.
And while I think I may be on one legitimate track for this 'problem', I wonder if another option is out there. The DSLR would allow me to control aperture, and thus DOF, viewing angle, etc., but maybe another equally liberating solution is out there like an action camera? I do not want to use a camcorder as those beasties do not have true manual focusing, and nothing to say about how much DOF I can get to keep podium, wife and dry-erase board in complete focus. Video just isn't my world.
BTW, I do not care about the recording length on non-camcorders because recording can be limited to individual topic-lengths in which 4-5 topics in a lecture might be the overall production for one lecture. Anyone got any ideas? Cell phones will not be considered.
Wife wants me to video record her lectures that she'll do from the classroom as normal, and then post the videos on the university system for students to access as they do with other materials. At first this seems like an easy thing. I have a Canon 5d MkIII but I have never done video with it. Nor do I have any video-editing software. My photography, which is personal not professional, doesn't require the horsepower that video-editing needs. Also, I know devices that are not classified as video recorders are limited to recording time (I think 30 min). I know I can get my camera to save to SD/CF in MPEG form (don't know which gen), which is compressed, but I do know this should require RAW output to external storage.
And while I think I may be on one legitimate track for this 'problem', I wonder if another option is out there. The DSLR would allow me to control aperture, and thus DOF, viewing angle, etc., but maybe another equally liberating solution is out there like an action camera? I do not want to use a camcorder as those beasties do not have true manual focusing, and nothing to say about how much DOF I can get to keep podium, wife and dry-erase board in complete focus. Video just isn't my world.
BTW, I do not care about the recording length on non-camcorders because recording can be limited to individual topic-lengths in which 4-5 topics in a lecture might be the overall production for one lecture. Anyone got any ideas? Cell phones will not be considered.