How to digitise your old videos
Do a spot of spring cleaning and you're likely to find a whole stack of videotapes lying around forlorn, sad and forgotten at the back of a shelf or cabinet somewhere. What should you do with these tapes?
Do a spot of spring cleaning and you're likely to find a whole stack of videotapes lying around forlorn, sad and forgotten at the back of a shelf or cabinet somewhere. What should you do with these tapes?
For those looking to move beyond the internal microphone on a digital SLR or camcorder, the VideoMic Pro can achieve excellent audio in a compact, lightweight and relatively inexpensive package.
Australian media preservation and digitisation company DAMsmart is responsible for processing thousands and thousands of hours of culturally significant footage. Here's a glimpse at some of the tech used behind the scenes at its Canberra office. more »
Share your photos, pictures, video clips and tunes with PhotoStage, a capable tool for creating video slideshows. more »
With its alternative WebM video encoding technology now entering the marketplace, Google has announced plans to remove support for a widely used rival codec called H.264 favoured by Apple and Microsoft. more »
The SD Association's new UHS-II technology will speed SD card transfer speeds. Plus: a new colour ebook format. more »
Recording family members goes hand-in-hand with the holidays. But what to do with all that unedited video? Turn it into home movies using one of these five handy apps, of course. more »
Achieving a smooth, fluid-moving image is the bane of any amateur videomaker. So check out what this inventive person decided to test his steadicam on... more »
Sony's Vegas Movie Studio HD Platinum 10.0 isn't for beginners, but it provides an exceptional number of features for home movie creation. more »
YouTube's new video editor lets you edit and splice together several videos into one, and all without any software needed. Here's how to use it. more »