camcorder

Sony Launches Smallest High-Def Camcorder

Titanium case shields from abuse

Sony today announced what it claims to be the smallest high-definition camcorder, the 10-ounce HDR-TG1 Handycam. Into this small package (1.3x4.8x2.5 inches), Sony sueezes most of the features that go into bigger models: including 1920x1080i resolution, a 10X optical zoom lens and face-recognition. It’s packed in a titanium shell with a scratch resistant coating that Sony calls “quite fashionable.”

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How It Works

How It Works: The Pocket-Size HD Camcorder

This HD camcorder packs 12 lenses in a barrel the size of your thumb for vivid, jitter-free video in a pocket-friendly package

HD: Deconstructed:  John B. Carnett

As cameras continue to shrink in size and weight, an often overlooked side effect is their lack of image stability. Naturally, the heavier the camera, the less your shaky hands move its lens. Via optical image stabilization, the Panasonic HDC-SD5 keeps footage rock solid while maintaining a pocket-size form factor.

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Canon Powershot SD550 Digital Elph

The Best Pocket Shooter

Never mind the business-card size of Canon's SD550 -check out its stunning images. The SD550 sports a powerful processor, borrowed from Canon's digital SLRs, that shoots quicker, processes images faster, and reproduces truer colors than ever before. Add in a 2.5-inch LCD, and it's the ideal go-everywhere camera.7.1MP; 2.2 x 3.5 x 1.1 inches; f2.8â€4.9 3x optical zoom (37mmâ€111mm, 35mm equivalent); 60fps video; $500

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Canon XL H1

Pro-quality hgh-def filmmaking for amateurs

Somewhere between the major television networks' $40,000 professional high-definition cameras and consumers' $3,500 HD camcorders are the independent filmmakers and small TV stations with the needs of the pros but not the budget. That's where Canon's XL H1 fits in, the first cam under $10,000 to deliver full manual control, 24-frame-per-second capture (to mimic analog film, the gold standard), and industry-standard time coding and connectors for easy integration into small TV stations' existing production equipment. 20x optical zoom lens included; $9,000

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Sony HDR-HC1 Handycam

High-Def recording in your palm

You won't look like a film-school refugee while toting the 1.4-pound HDR-HC1, which captures full 1080i HDTV-resolution video with a body that's about one third the size of its rivals. It uses readily available MiniDV tapes for HD capture, enabling both high-def and standard-def playback straight from the camcorder. 2.7-inch widescreen display;
10x optical zoom; $2,000

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Adobe Premiere Elements 2.0

Video from any source straight to edit

If you use a DVD camcorder, cellphone or digital camera to record video, you typically have to jump through hoops to convert it into a format that most DVD-editing software will accept. That entails at least one separate conversion tool and the navigation of an alphabet soup of settings: DivX? MPEG-2? What resolution? What frame rate? Adobe's Premiere Elements 2.0 seamlessly imports and integrates footage from any source, so you can burn a DVD without worrying about formats. And it accepts video over the more ubiquitous USB as well as over Firewire. $100

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Kodak Easyshare-One

Share your shots with built-in wi-fi

Little by little, the digital camera is untethering itself from the PC. First there was printing. Then there was in-camera editing, including cropping, red-eye removal and exposure compensation. Now, with Kodak's EasyShare-one, the last piece falls into place: wireless sharing straight from the cam. Creating a camera that can take a Wi-Fi card doesn't seem tricky. Kodak's challenge was making sure users could effortlessly get online; you can add settings for any hotspot or connect setup-free to T-Mobile hotspots around the world.

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JVC Everio G

hours of video without tape

The JVC Everio G shakes the short recording time and so-so picture quality that dogged earlier tapeless camcorders. It records seven hours of DVD-quality MPEG-2 video (or longer at lower quality) straight onto a built-in 30-gigabyte hard drive. Offload video to your PC and burn it to DVD, no conversion required. 2.6 x 2.8 x 4.3 inches; 0.71 pound; $1,000

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Gusty Shooters

VGA Digital Cameras

CASIO
EXILIM Zoom EX-Z750
MSRP: $449
Resolution [effective]: 7.2 megapixels
Video file type: MPEG-4
Zoom lens type: 3x optical/ 8x digital zoom lens, f2.8-5.1 [38-114mm 35mm equivalent]
Lighting: AF Assist lamp
LCD size: 2.5"
Frame rate and window size: 30 fps at 640x480
Dimensions: 3.5" x 2.3" x .88"
Weight: 4.48 ounces [w/o battery]
Memory Type: SD Card

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Suddenly, a Wealth of Camcorder Choices

With four new formats in the marketplace, the problem is choosing wisely.

For almost eight years, there wasn't much going on in camcorder technology—if you wanted something small and good, MiniDV was your only real option. Now we have an embarrassment of riches: New formats that promise greater portability, better ease of use and improved picture quality have sprouted up. Which one should you buy? First, define your needs and ambitions, then look at features and, of course, price.


1. The Best of the Basics

MiniDV camcorder

Price: Starts at $399

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