Quote:
I just bought the HD100 and love it. If you don't really need slow-mo in 720 for a lot of work, then you can shoot in 480/60P and upres which still looks decent. I will be doing mostly 720/24P in the future, and plan to use the extra $2000 for a HDD and other accessories. |
Quote:
Adding the 50P and 60P record modes required entire re-engineering of the MPEG-2 encoder to a new level of quality and capability. The R&D to do this and then the cost to produce it is very expensive. Regards, Carl |
Quote:
Don't know. I will ask product management. |
Quote:
|
I'm in the same way as Brian. The "eternal wait" for a better investment is a trap and very easy to fall into. I recently bought a HD101 and had the same doubts but finally i thought "i'm ready to shoot and this cam, right now, it's perfect for my work". I want it for filmmaking and i don't know if i gonna exploit all its features.
Maybe today it's cheaper. Maybe the new model it's better. Nevermind. I love the cam i have now, in this moment. It's cool. The footage it's impressive. Have a tremendous potential. A year ago, HD-24p in this range of price doesn't exist. Undoubtedly, i'm a lucky guy. |
You can always trade up, That's my plan make money on the HD100 and when the time is right you will have no regrets.
|
you can always wait for the HD500. joking, cameras are like computers, there will always be a better one coming out in due time.
my 2 cents |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:24 PM. |
DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2024 The Digital Video Information Network