top camcorders of 2009 image
Kathleen
Hi - thank you so much for your response. It was really helpful! The camera is a Canon SR900 - I just checked. Any more info would be helpful
Answer
I searched "Canon SR 900". There is none. There's a Canon SD 900 - that is a digital still camera that happens to take very highly compressed video as a convenience. It does not have a firewire port so there is no reason for you to look for a firewire cable for this camera to import video to the computer.
You will want to download and install MPEG StreamClip:
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/video/mpegstreamclip.html
To get the video from this camera (not a camcorder) to your Mac:
1) Get a card reader. This connects with a USB cable.
2) Take the memory card out of the camera and put it in the card reader.
3) Locate the video files (the directory structure and fil location is described in the camera's manual).
4) Copy the filed from the card to the Mac.
5) Launch MPEG StreamClip and convert that video file to a MOV or MP4 files. Quit MPEG StreamClip.
6) Launch iMovie. Drag the converted file to the iMovie Capture area - or the Clips pane - then drag to the timeline and edit.
IF the camcorder is a Canon ZR900, then you need a firewire cable. The ZR900 is a miniDV tape based camcorder. You will connect the camcorder's DV port to the Mac's firewire port.
If your Mac is a MacBook made between October 2008 and June 2009, there is no firewire port and no way to add one. If your Mac is a MacBook Air there is no firewire port and no way to add one. If your MacBook was made before October 2008 or after June 2009, or any other Macintosh made in the last 10+ years, it has a firewire port. Older Macs use a 6-pin firewire 400 connection - newer ones use a 9-pin firewire 800 connection.
To know which your Mac has (assuming it has a firewire port), under the Apple (top left corner), select "About this Mac". Click on "More Info". The "System Profiler window will appear. On the left, under Hardware, click on Firewire... it will show "up to 400 Mb/sec" or "up to 800 Mb/sec"... then you know which connector you need - the camcorder's DV port is always a 4-pin...
I searched "Canon SR 900". There is none. There's a Canon SD 900 - that is a digital still camera that happens to take very highly compressed video as a convenience. It does not have a firewire port so there is no reason for you to look for a firewire cable for this camera to import video to the computer.
You will want to download and install MPEG StreamClip:
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/video/mpegstreamclip.html
To get the video from this camera (not a camcorder) to your Mac:
1) Get a card reader. This connects with a USB cable.
2) Take the memory card out of the camera and put it in the card reader.
3) Locate the video files (the directory structure and fil location is described in the camera's manual).
4) Copy the filed from the card to the Mac.
5) Launch MPEG StreamClip and convert that video file to a MOV or MP4 files. Quit MPEG StreamClip.
6) Launch iMovie. Drag the converted file to the iMovie Capture area - or the Clips pane - then drag to the timeline and edit.
IF the camcorder is a Canon ZR900, then you need a firewire cable. The ZR900 is a miniDV tape based camcorder. You will connect the camcorder's DV port to the Mac's firewire port.
If your Mac is a MacBook made between October 2008 and June 2009, there is no firewire port and no way to add one. If your Mac is a MacBook Air there is no firewire port and no way to add one. If your MacBook was made before October 2008 or after June 2009, or any other Macintosh made in the last 10+ years, it has a firewire port. Older Macs use a 6-pin firewire 400 connection - newer ones use a 9-pin firewire 800 connection.
To know which your Mac has (assuming it has a firewire port), under the Apple (top left corner), select "About this Mac". Click on "More Info". The "System Profiler window will appear. On the left, under Hardware, click on Firewire... it will show "up to 400 Mb/sec" or "up to 800 Mb/sec"... then you know which connector you need - the camcorder's DV port is always a 4-pin...
Are Orion Subwoofers a good brand? If not what are some good brands?
John B
Answer
Orion Electric Co., Ltd. (ãªãªãªã³é»æ©æ ªå¼ä¼ç¤¾, Orion Denki Kabushiki-gaisha?) was established in 1958 in Osaka, Japan, and it is currently based in the city of Echizen, Fukui Prefecture. The products manufactured were transistor radios, radio cassette recorders, car stereos, and music centers. In 1967, Orion Electric moved to Fukui prefecture in Japan, where it still has its head office today. One of the world's largest OEM television and video manufacturers, Orion produces well over six million televisions and twelve million VCRs, DVD players, and combo units each year. Orion is a highly-valued supplier to OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) customers.
The Orion Group employs in excess of 9,000 workers. It has factories and offices on four continents, including Japan, Thailand, United Kingdom, Poland and United States. Its flagship Thailand factories are especially proud of their achievement as being one of the top exporters in this country, and have been recognized with an award from the Thai Government for their contribution.
Over the years, Orion has established and expanded its manufacturing facilities to develop and produce large and small screen color TVs (CRT, LCD, plasma), TV combos, VCRs, camcorders (VHS-C), DVD players, and DVD/VCR combos for the U.S., European, and Australian markets. Orion is the originator of the televideo concept.
Orion manufactures products for eleven of the world's top electronic brands. Its primary, long-time brands are Broksonic, Durabrand, Memorex, Orion, and Sansui. Orion used to manufacture many TV/VCR combos and VCRs for Emerson Radio during the 80s and 90s for 10 years, but Emerson Radio went bankrupt and was brought up by Funai in 2000. Then, Orion manufactured televisions and DVD/VCR combos for Toshiba until 2009. Currently, Orion specializes in LCD/LED combo televisions with Blu-Ray/DVD built-in, and manufactures exclusively for Hitachi, JVC, Sanyo, and Sharp based on each company's OEM order. Orion also operates Orion Sales, headquartered in Olney, Illinois, for the North American market, under its Sansui brand. Prior to 2001, Orion was the exclusive supplier for Wal-Mart of discounted Orion-branded televisions and VCRs during the 90's.
others good ones are pioneer, kenwood, luxman, sony, jbl, wharfdale, yamaha, marantz
Orion Electric Co., Ltd. (ãªãªãªã³é»æ©æ ªå¼ä¼ç¤¾, Orion Denki Kabushiki-gaisha?) was established in 1958 in Osaka, Japan, and it is currently based in the city of Echizen, Fukui Prefecture. The products manufactured were transistor radios, radio cassette recorders, car stereos, and music centers. In 1967, Orion Electric moved to Fukui prefecture in Japan, where it still has its head office today. One of the world's largest OEM television and video manufacturers, Orion produces well over six million televisions and twelve million VCRs, DVD players, and combo units each year. Orion is a highly-valued supplier to OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) customers.
The Orion Group employs in excess of 9,000 workers. It has factories and offices on four continents, including Japan, Thailand, United Kingdom, Poland and United States. Its flagship Thailand factories are especially proud of their achievement as being one of the top exporters in this country, and have been recognized with an award from the Thai Government for their contribution.
Over the years, Orion has established and expanded its manufacturing facilities to develop and produce large and small screen color TVs (CRT, LCD, plasma), TV combos, VCRs, camcorders (VHS-C), DVD players, and DVD/VCR combos for the U.S., European, and Australian markets. Orion is the originator of the televideo concept.
Orion manufactures products for eleven of the world's top electronic brands. Its primary, long-time brands are Broksonic, Durabrand, Memorex, Orion, and Sansui. Orion used to manufacture many TV/VCR combos and VCRs for Emerson Radio during the 80s and 90s for 10 years, but Emerson Radio went bankrupt and was brought up by Funai in 2000. Then, Orion manufactured televisions and DVD/VCR combos for Toshiba until 2009. Currently, Orion specializes in LCD/LED combo televisions with Blu-Ray/DVD built-in, and manufactures exclusively for Hitachi, JVC, Sanyo, and Sharp based on each company's OEM order. Orion also operates Orion Sales, headquartered in Olney, Illinois, for the North American market, under its Sansui brand. Prior to 2001, Orion was the exclusive supplier for Wal-Mart of discounted Orion-branded televisions and VCRs during the 90's.
others good ones are pioneer, kenwood, luxman, sony, jbl, wharfdale, yamaha, marantz
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