a word for Apple People...
First, the review by Ray Price listed here, is fair and accurate. No need to repeat
what he has stated so well. The MC200 is a great little back-up/pocket camcorder.
However, it produces files for Windows based video formats only. It is not "officially" supported by Apple, but, if you are a Mac person, there is a happy solution.
The files produced by the camera can be easily translated into video formats that will be accepted by either iMovie HD or Final Cut Pro HD/Final Cut Pro 5. Go to the website: homepage.mac.com/major 4/ and you will be instructed how you can easily upgrade your Quicktime for MPEG 2, and use a shareware application called" ffmegX" (an easy drag, drop & click program) to reformat the (.MOD) MC200's movie files (or the MC100's/MC500's) for use on the Mac. (You will want to rename the MC200's movie file into an ".MPG" file and then drop it in ffmegX's left column, then, scroll down the right column and convert it to a "MOV MPEG4" or as "DV"
There are additional parameters available in ffmegX, so you can fine tune your settings.
The resulting movie will open up on any Mac [running OSX] with good video and sound and import fluidly into iMovie HD or Final Cut Pro HD/Final Cut Pro 5.
Also, the current version of ffmegX will work in the new Apple OSX 10.4 Tiger for this conversion process).
The MC200 is a fun camera. Like the iPod, there are no drive gears to make any noise; so, the built-in mic doesn't catch any extraneous noise of a camera tape transport motor. Also, not having to deal with tapes is a great time and money saver.
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Small Camera packs a nice punch.
The Verio GZMC200 is a great, almost PROSUMER level mini cam.
PROS: Super video quality, highly sensitive built in stereo mic with wind cut, built in flash, ultra compact size. 2MB Still capability is very good for daytime shooting. Included 4GB Micro Drive. The fact that the camera accepts two different kinds of media is also a great thing. You can record your movies on the included 4GB Micro Drive while saving your still images to an SD Card.
CONS: Washout of white light by flash. I wish that the 200 model had the pop-up flash like the forthcoming 3CCD model to avoid the overflash you get with this model. The flash is too close to the lens causing the results of your flash shots to look overexposed, especially with lighter backdrops. Another quirky thing is the fact that there is no remote control as you would normally see on a minicam. I was dissapointed to open the box and not have that feature, especially for tripod shooting or self portraits. Built in self timer is good, but doesnt replace a true remote. If you have big hands you wont like removing the Microdrive. Its very difficult to remove the CF Card and there is little room to get a grip on the card to extract it from the slot. This is a minor flaw, but worth mentioning.
Bottom Line: Give this little camera a higher still shot capability (3-5 MP) and a decent flash and a remote and youve got a perfect, miniature Prosumer camera. I hope that JVC will have a remote control on the 3CCD Model. My overall opinion is very good of this camera, but its not perfect and if you are patient and want the quality of a 5MP Still and 3CCD technology, wait for the 3CCD Model to be released later this year. I am anxious to test that one myself.
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A Great Video Camera
I have had this camera for 2 weeks now and i am loving it. On my 27inch TV the video quality rivals Hollywood. On the highest quality setting you can shoot 60 min of video, and the battery(cell phone size) only last 60 min before needing recharged so you really have no reason to shoot at any less quality video. The software package is great. I had trouble installing the software at first on my PC, as the installer for the software packet was on a subfolder of the CD and was not on the autostarter main folder of the CD. Instead what "was" on the autostart for the CD was McAffee Firewall Installer. Why that came with the CD i am not sure. The Cyberlink Producer PC program is great. You can Cut, Paste, Add Music and Narrative to your movie. You can make a DVD Menu and chapter selection and burn to a DVD disc using your PC with little effort. I highly suggest you use a tripod with this camera as every little hand twitch and shake will be caught with this camera while shooting video. The camera has two audio speakers on top of the camera for dolby digital sound. The joy involved with seeing something in you video go from the left side of the screen to the right and hearing the sound follow from the left to the right. While watching my home videos on PC There is a little of playing catch up as the video is a little gittering even though my computer is a 1.7Gz and has 650Ram. But once the video is burned to DVD and watched on a DVD Player the video is smooth and uncomprimised. I would highly suggest this camera to anyone as long as you have a tripod and are not shooting video for more than 60 min without buying an extra battery $73 and extra microdrive 2.2Gig for $100 or 4Gig for $180.
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Great product, new people might want to wait
This is a great product so long as you know that you are buying a product that is likely to increase in quality and lower in cost quickly. The camera lives up to the claims made by JVC, nothing wrong there. If you are just diving into digital video, you might want to wait for the next generation, for lower cost as well as more products to choose from. The Everio has great software, especially compared to early digital video cameras, and the battery time so far has been great. Overall I have been very happy with this product, but once again, do your homework and know what you are buying...this is not the be all end all of video cameras.
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A good SECOND camcorder
While there is much I really like about this camera, its short comings prevent me from recommending it to people who want just one video camera. The problems I am experiencing deal mostly with the camera's POOR performance in medium to low light conditions. While many camcorders excel at producing images in standard room lighting, this camera does a dismal job. In normal room lighting the auto focus will occasionally fail and even at the best of the times the images lack adequate saturation. The manual white balance settings improve the situation only marginally. If you are going to be shooting inside your house, use another camcorder.
Now the upside - the camcorder delivers good quality images when shooting outside. Motion artifacts are occasionally detectable when objects in the scene move quickly but not annoying at all. The zoom is quite satisfying and the auto focus only lags slightly behind when quickly zooming in the 10x optical zoom range. The compact size is spectacular! The standard tripod mount socket is a welcome addition.
And, of course, the whole video editing experience is greatly enhanced by the direct transfer of the camera's hard drive to your editing station's hard drive. (I recommend you get a card reader or PCMCIA adapter, so the camera isn't involved in the video transfer. You can be charging the camera while you are working with the saved video - something you'll do often as the battery only lasts an hour).
The saved video files have a .mod extension. The manual says you should only use the supplied software to edit/play the video files. The supplied software is from Cyberlink and it is adequate. I have found that by renaming the files to .mpg after I have copied them to my editing station, I can edit/play the video files with software not supplied with the camera. Don't know if this will work in all cases, but so far so good.
The still camera images are actually quite nice for a 2 mega pixel camera. They are always saved as JPEG files. I have found no option to save as a lossless TIFF. A real shame since the supplied 4GB microdrive really has enough room to store these big files.
The audio quality is excellent, no complaints what so ever.
One last disappointment - the camera limits maximum file size to 4GB, even if you have a compact flash card that can hold more. As a result it shall forever be impossible for this camera to record more than 60 continuous minutes using the highest quality video setting. Sure, an 8GB card can hold 2 of these 60 minute recordings but something will be missed when the first file hits the 4GB wall and the recording is stopped and the camera waits for you to manually start a new recording session.
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Has its pluses and minuses
Pluses are obvious - slap the CF card in your PC reader and you can instantly start editing, converting, and/or burning the video to DVD. Much more convenient than (ugh) in-camera DV capture with a regular DV video camera. The accompanying software package is a perfect match for this camera. Also, this camera is freaking TINY. Although the video is not as good as my DV camera, I will undoubtably use it much more. Audio is excellent, Dolby Digital.
Minuses - Compared to my Sony DV camera, the focusing is slow and inaccurate. Holding the camera still is extremely difficult because of its size - the stability feature is essential although not spectacular - you need to work to keep this thing still. Although the resolution is the same as DV (720x480), I think my DV cameras picture is better, probably due to the CCD. The picture is not very sharp, and movement is pretty blurry.
Conclusion: This is an early adopter product. I would love to see a version with a better CCD and flash, which will undoubtably be down the road the next 12 months or so.
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Very good camcorder with some issues
I've had the GZ-MC200 for a couple of months. took it on a vacation to the far east, and overall i am very glad I made the purchase.
Pros:
- very high quality video and sound.
- digital media makes video transfer to PC a snap. just take out the microdrive and plug it into a card reader.
- high quality stills. not as good as a dedicated digital camera, but 4x6 prints still turn out nice. also, the 10x optical zoom is much more powerful than the usual point and shoot.
- small and compact.
- raises eyebrows.
- accepts both CF and SD.
- bundled software is easy to use and creates pro-looking dvds.
Cons:
- expensive media.
- camera gets really hot when shooting long footage.
- battery life is short.
- slow to turn on. can someone tell me how to disable the JVC animation during start-up?
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Great All-Around Package
This is a great all-around camera. I would suggest that if you're going to spend the money, take a look at the step up--JVC Everio GZMC500 5 MP 3 CCD.
The picture quality is great under good lighting conditions. The less light, the more grainy the image which is true of pretty much any camera that is in this price range. Lighting conditions also affect the auto-focus capabilities.
I use this camera for video documentation and it works extremely well. With this camera I have a completely digital workflow and don't have to worry about converting analog tapes to digital. No more cropping to eliminate gutter noise, too.
The CyberLink software included with the camera is very basic. I use it for one purpose only: to convert the proprietary capture file to an .avi that i can edit in another platform. I use Sony Vegas which does everything I need for documentation.
The digital camera function is excellent considering it is a secondary function. It is not comparable to high-end Canon or Sony digital cameras, but I think it's better than anything out there under $350. I can set the white balance and capture at 1600 px.
I also like the voice capture function. This is particularly useful with video documentation. After I've edited my video, I can record a voice-over and insert it as an mp3 layer in Vegas.
Two complaints I have are the size of the camera and the software included. The camera is very sensitive to movement. Because it is so small it is difficult to attach to a tripod to maintain a steady foundation. Holding the camera for long distance shots does not work--any movement at all produces a shaky image that is also in and out of focus because of the auto-focus.
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Important tip for indoors shooting
Had this camera for a month, used it extensively in recent vacation.
Bottom line it's a superb video camera. Video clips are very high quality with a lot of details and good colors; you just can't believe such great quality video came form this tiny camera.
Its biggest selling point of quick PC transfer and fast DVD creation works extremely well. I've transferred 41min of video to my old PC and burned a DVD within 21minutes from start to finish with only a few mouse clicks.
Best by the way is to use USB2.0 card reader instead of the camera for video transfer, it works MUCH faster.
It's biggest issue is mediocre indoors performance. It's not "poor" as some people say since JVC did a very good job of reducing noise in low light, so the video looks very smooth and pleasant to the eye.
The problem remains with washout colors and little too dark images.
I came of a way to improve its indoors performance significantly, use "M" mode with white balance set to "Cloudy" and shutter speed set to 1/50 (in extreme conditions 1/30)
The camera store these settings, so you just need to set these once and switch to "M" whenever shooting indoors.
Video will look a little brighter and colors more saturated.
Overall extremely well built very good high quality camera with only a few tweaks, with its recent price drop to about $800 it's a good value.
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great camera
This is one of the better digital cameras on the market today. It has great optical zoom and I love the quality. The biggest downfall is the PRICE, it really hurts you wallet. But i got mine for free. Just copy and paste the following link into your address bar: digitalcameras.freepay.com/?r=26142594 and check it out. Have fun and get things free!
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Nearly perfect except in low light
Pros:
- Great video quality if the light is good
- Great sound quality if the person shooting doesn't talk too loud
- Great size
- Massive convenience of not having to rip and encode video
Cons:
- Terrible (useless) video quality in low light
- Cannot focus in low light (making even still photos with flash difficult)
- Sensitive mike results in audio distortion is person shooting talks loudly
- S-l-o-w cold start
- No flash shoe or tripod mount
The above pretty much sums up all that is good/bad with this camera. If it worked better in low light I'd give it five stars.
One tip - the camera produces MPEG2 video with AC3 audio (not MP2), in files with a .MOD suffix. You can rename these to .MPG to play them, but many players will not handle the AC3 sound. There is a free tool to fix this. Amazon won't let me include a link but search for Converio and you should find it.
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Excellent! More than pleased... and still just as good as the newer, more expensive larger-capacity JVC models.
Of course you've already read the con's about low light performance, but you can fix this by setting the "M" mode (manual) to "Cloudy" and selecting 1/30-1/60th shutter speed. I use 1/30th - and it's works like a charm.
Honestly, anyone who complains about low-light problems must be referring to shooting in near total darkness because with 1 20 watt bulb in the room, the lighting is sufficient.
It's true it gets warm... but so does my PocketPC when it's writing to its media card or when it's processing a large application continuously. That's to be expected. If you're going to be shooting something long (like a wedding) then it might be a problem -- but for the average 10-30 minute shooting, it's not a problem at all.
The video quality is EXCEPTIONAL, DVD-quality video. You'll be amazed that, despite the size of this camcorder (it literally does fit in the palm of your hand... 3 1/2 inches in length... tiny), it really produces exceptionally clear footage that you wouldn't expect from such a tiny camera! All in all, an excellent unit eventhough JVC has come out with 40 GB camcorders now for $300 more. Why bother? Just get this cheaper camera and a few extra microdrives or SD cards (they're not THAT expensive like people are saying... prices have really dropped on media). You'll have the peace of mind of knowing that you're not keeping all of your video footage in "one basket" -- and you can spread out your footage. A superb camcorder (and an excellent 2 megapixel camera, too!)
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Please be accurate with you information on the GZ-MC200
This is a great camcorder. Ray Price is incorrect on the 4 gig limit as I am running a high speed 8 gig cf card and it works fine. I get 2 hours 9 minutes out of the card on ultra fine and about 30% less battery drain than the micro drive. I really like this camcorder.
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to small
it's just to small. good video and small camera do not go hand in hand.
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Small, Portable, Great If You Accept The Limitations
It does have excellent video quality - without the hassles transfering video that I've seen on my older dvdcam (card reader = video download)
It doesn't shoot the quality of photos that my old Lumix will. Great for snapshots when you just need a portable camera and camcorder and just don't feel like packing two.
Low light conditions have limitations, but similar to regular camcorders in darkness of video.
No mount for external camcorder light.
Very small, fits the hand better than the MC100 by JVC.
Similar in size to JVCs hard drive only camcorders, but you can access video and photos without connecting to this camcorder (by removing the CF and SD cards).
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product just ok - using it is a nightmare
I bought this camera to video my new born, and catch him in all his new stages. I now have a lot of video I can only view on my computer. It records ok in full sun and very badly in poor light. But the biggest problem is that all files are MOD files and most software will not recognize MOD, so you have to convert it. Now, I am not super techno savvy but I am not a dolt either, and I had a good deal of trouble managing this. Then if you want to add music or anything the software bundle that they include is truly pathetic. And then it is nearly impossible to take what you have made and play it on anything else. Do not buy this camera unless you know exactly what and how to do things. Look for a more layman-friendly product.
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