Snazzi Dv Studio Software
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Even though most camcorders sold today are DV models, there are plenty of analogue camcorders still in use, whether Hi8, 8mm, or one of the four VHS variants. Given the wide range of low-cost video editing hardware and software available and the capabilities of modern PCs, it's never been easier for anyone to start video editing, irrespective of what type of footage they have. V One's latest Snazzi-branded editing solution, DV.AVIO, can handle analogue and digital capture and is based around a PCI card - still the only route open to users of desktop PCs without FireWire capability built in - paired with a breakout box for analogue inputs.
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1 Review ( Dec 2003 V-One Multimedia's Snazzi DV.AVIO by John B. Virata Page 1 of 1 V-One Multimedia's Snazzi DV.AVIO editing system is a $199 combination hardware/software editing solution that enables you to capture/convert video from analog and DV sources to MPEG-1 and 2, DV, Microsoft's WMV, DIVX, and Xvid file formats. It is comprised of the Snazzi DV.AVIO software front end, including WinDVD Creator Plus, muveeautoproducer, moviefactory 2, and WinDVD4; and a combination hardware PCI card with breakout box that connects to the PCI card for connecting S- Video and composite video devices. In addition to the MPEG decoder chip and the Main Concept Professional codec, the PCI card features a pair of six pin FireWire ports. The benefits of this solution gives you the capability to capture/convert video from the widest array of sources. These sources include S-Video, Composite video, and DV. In addition, when you are finished editing the video, either with the bundled software that ships with the system or your own existing video editing software, the Snazzi DV.AVIO enables you to export that video back out to DV or composite/s-video tape. Installation: Installation of the Snazzi DV.AVIO involves plugging the Snazzi PCI card into an
2 available PCI slot, plugging the breakout box into the back of the PCI card for analog video capture/conversion, and installing the Snazzi DV.AVIO capture software. It is virtually a painless installation. System requirements are a 1.8GHz Pentium 4 CPU running Windows XP, 256MB RAM, a graphics card capable of supporting 1024 x 768 resolution, and an available PCI slot. Figure about 14GB of disk space for each hour of DV video, so factor in a hard disk drive with lots of storage. If you want to save disk space and will be burning to DVD, consider capturing in MPEG-1 or 2, as these formats require much less disk space. Snazzi setup window DV Studio AVIO The Snazzi setup window is where you select the parameters for the video that you want to capture. The DV Studio AVIO software enables you to capture video to MPEG-1, MPEG-2, DV, and Windows Media Format. You can also capture to Divx and Xvid provided you pay for and download the encoders from their respective websites. The setup window is also where you designate where on your hard drive you want the
3 captured video to be placed, as well as what you wish to name the captured video. You can have the software generate a name for you, or you can name it yourself. With MPEG-1 selected, you have the option to produce an MPEG-1 file for Video CD (VCD), or Normal quality MPEG-1. You can also select the video's bitrate as well as the video encoder quality. These can be adjusted via sliders in the capture settings window. Selecting the MPEG-2 capture setting enables you to choose between constant or variable bitrates. DV AVIO enables you to transcode to a variety of file formats Selecting the DV capture format gives you the capability to capture either a DV-Type-1 or DV-Type 2 format. You can also select if you want the video to playback at