Showing posts with label panasonic digital audio recorder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label panasonic digital audio recorder. Show all posts

Sunday, October 26, 2014

4GB USB Pen Drive Digital Audio Voice Recorder 70 Hours

4GB USB Pen Drive Digital Audio Voice Recorder 70 Hours
  • Memory capacity: 4GB
  • Recording format
  • Recording rate: 128bps
  • Recording time: about 70 hours

4GB USB Pen Drive Digital Audio Voice Recorder 70 Hours

This recorder works flawlessly. I can attach it to my cell phone and record telephone conversations both ways.

Buy 4GB USB Pen Drive Digital Audio Voice Recorder 70 Hours Now

This little item works exactly as advertised. Clear recording and easy to just transfer to your recordings to a pc

Read Best Reviews of 4GB USB Pen Drive Digital Audio Voice Recorder 70 Hours Here

I love this little thing. light weight, easy to "stash" places, and good sound. I love how there is little hiss and static if no sound is being recorded. It is great for EVP ghost hunting. I love it so much I have more than 1 now.

Want 4GB USB Pen Drive Digital Audio Voice Recorder 70 Hours Discount?

The voice recorder has very good quality audio, though if you move it around you will hear static. For the price it's a great product. The only problem I had with it is the cap for the USB is difficult to get off, and required a small, hard object to open. I'm still giving it a 5 out of 5 because of the price and quality.

This works great, I had one that went threw the washer, that will kill the mic, everything on it I was able to retrieve. I use this for long meetings that last for hours and it record everything, I put it on the table in middle and it records I can hear everyone.

Monday, October 6, 2014

SONY ICDSX712 DIGITAL VOICE RECORDER (2 GB, 700 HOURS IN LP,LINEAR PCM)

SONY ICDSX712 DIGITAL VOICE RECORDERஇ Fuzzy Wuzzy's Summary:

ѾѾѾѾѾ Very highly recommended with warm fuzzies!

I work in high tech and I am also a musician who plays guitars, harmonica, and world-beat/ethnic percussion. So I find portable digital recorders like this to be highly useful on a weekly basis for recording everything from personal dictation of thoughts and ideas, to in-person meetings, to telephone conferences, to jam sessions with my other musician friends, to recording impromptu music ideas and vocals.

Prior to purchasing this Sony ICD-SX712, I frequently used a Sony ICD-SX750 2 GB Flash Memory Digital Voice Recorder (Black). And before that, one of my main portable digital recorders was a Sony MZ-NF810CK Net MD MiniDisc Recorder with Car Kit with a Sony ECM-DS70P Electret Condenser Stereo Microphone for recording music ideas, jam sessions, and rehearsals. Sony's MZ-NF810CK Net MD MiniDisc recorder offered CD-quality digital recording with a full 20Hz-20,000Hz +/-3dB frequency range, along with an AM/FM/TV/Weather tuner. But for years, my one big complaint with Sony's Net MD MiniDisc recorder was that the device had no 'Line Out' or easy method to transfer my digital recordings off of its MiniDisc so that I could perform further editing on the computer.

Even though the "712" number in this ICD-SX712 model is numerically smaller than Sony's previous model of ICD-SX750, I see this model as a substantially improved direct replacement for their previous ICD-SX750 model, which was also priced very similarly. Since I have both the ICD-SX750 and ICD-SX712 recorders, some of this product review will compare the two models.

With the advent of affordable digital recorders that use onboard flash memory and/or Memory Stick Micro (M2) and microSD memory cards, I find myself using my Net MD recorder less and less now. Note that the Sony line of "ICD" recorders are NOT really professional digital audio recorders for recording full-spectrum music, but this ICD-SX712 can still produce a very good CD-quality stereo recording for most kinds of music. Using its best LPCM 44.1 kHz 16-bit recording mode, the ICD-SX712 records a frequency range of 40Hz-20kHz. Depending upon the music that you are wanting to record, this may or may not be sufficient since a dedicated digital audio recorder will go down to 20 Hz. If you really want a digital audio recorder for music applications, I would highly recommend either the Sony PCM-M10/R Portable Linear PCM Recorder, 96-kHz/24-bit, 4GB Memory & USB High-Speed Port, Glossy Red, the Zoom H4n Handy Portable Digital Recorder, both of which will record a pristine 20Hz to 20,000+ Hz frequency range at 96-kHz/24-bit recording mode, or one of the Tascam portable digital recorders. Sony's "ICD" recorder line is more optimized for recording voice (dictation, interviews, meetings), but this ICD-SX712 also does a very good job of recording music. There is not much musical content that goes below the 40Hz sub-bass low end that this ICD-SX712 can record: the low fundamentals of a bass tuba, and the fundamentals of a contrabassoon, harp, double bass, pipe organ, piano.

What is in the box package?

✵ ICD-SX712 Voice Recorder

✵ Two AAA alkaline batteries

✵ "Ear bud" stereo headphones

✵ Mini-USB-to-USB cable to connect the recorder to your computer

✵ Sound Organizer software CD (for Windows 7/Vista/XP only, no Mac support)

✵ Soft carrying pouch sleeve

✵ Stand, with tripod mount, for positioning the recorder's microphone

✵ Highly detailed 155-page all-English 'Operating Instructions' guide

The voice recorder itself has size dimensions of 1 1/4 inches wide by 5 3/8 inches long with a thickness of 5/8 inches, and it weighs 2.3 ounces without batteries and 3.1 ounces with batteries. So it is a quarter-inch longer than my ICD-SX750 and a half-ounce heavier.

More of the ICD-SX712's features are described and rated below:

ѾѾѾѾѾ Excellent 5-fuzzies feature ratings:

ѾѾѾѾѾ The recorded sound quality is excellent with crystal-clear sound clarity, both in its directional and stereo microphone positions. Stereo recordings have excellent three-dimensional spatial imaging. And when the recording level is set to "High" microphone sensitivity, the recorded speech of a distant speaker in a large auditorium is excellent. Sony claims that this recorder can pick up sounds from 25 meters (82 feet) away when using its highest-quality LPCM recording format, and I do not doubt that claim.

ѾѾѾѾѾ Compared to my older ICD-SX750, the ICD-SX712's microphones are noticeably more sensitive for recording even the slightest low-level sounds. My acoustic guitar fingerpicking gets recorded with the subtle sounds of my fingers working the strings, speech and vocals get recorded with the slight sounds of breathing, and the directional recording of a person speaking at the far end of a room or a stereo recording of both nearby and distant birds chirping in the trees all get recorded with great clarity. This new recorder introduces Sony's newly-developed 'S-Microphone System', and it combines advanced audio processing technology with a highly sensitive new microphone that captures even faint or distant subjects with extra clarity while reducing background hiss. A 'S-Master Digital Amplifier' produces great accuracy, clear separation of signals, and balanced sound reproduction using digital-to-digital processing, and the recorded signal is taken through the full-digital DSP stage without additional digital-to-analog conversion.

ѾѾѾѾѾ This voice recorder has lots of features with a great deal of usefulness! Do not feel apprehensive about feeling like you need to read all of this recorder's 155-page 'Operating Instructions' guide. You do not need to read all the pages to begin using this recorder effectively. For quick ease of use initially, you just need to read/skim the first 39 pages. This covers the basics of setup, recording, listening, and erasing. If you will mainly use the recorder for one, two, or three main purposes (e.g. dictation, group meetings, and music recording), you just need to familiarize yourself with a handful of the recorder's options for adjusting its recording parameters to suit each situation. For example, I mainly use my recorder for the following purposes: personal dictation with speech-to-text conversion using Dragon NaturallySpeaking Premium 11, recording work-related phone calls, recording a group meeting, and recording musical performances either by me with friends or by others in a music rehearsal setting.

Like the previous ICD-SX750 model, this voice recorder comes with a thorough 'Operating Instructions' guide. On Sony's Web site, I did notice that there is also a simple 'Quick Start Guide' PDF that you can download. I do not know why this 'Quick Start Guide' was not included in the package, but perhaps since this product was only released a month ago, they did not have a printed 'Quick Start Guide' available for packaging at the time?

ѾѾѾѾѾ Setup is pretty simple. The recorder comes with two AAA alkaline batteries. I can also use my own rechargeable AAA batteries. When used with rechargeable batteries, the batteries will recharge whenever I connect the recorder to my computer using the supplied Mini-USB-to-USB cable. Alternately, I can use the USB cord to connect the recorder to a separately-purchased AC adapter, e.g. Belkin Mini Surge Protector Dual USB Charger or Sony's own Sony AC U50AD Power adapter. Rechargeable batteries take about 4 hours to fully recharge from an empty state. However, with the recorder connected via USB to a turned-on computer or to an AC adapter, I can charge the batteries while still using the recorder, which is very handy for very long recording sessions.

The ICD-SX712 can record in the following formats, listed with their approximate hours of recording time listed for using both fully-charged alkaline and rechargeable batteries, the maximum recording time that can be stored by the internal 2-GB flash memory, and the frequency range that is recorded:

LPCM 44.1kHz/16bit: 25 hrs alkaline, 19 hrs rechargeable; 3 hours 0 minutes; 40-20,000 Hz

MP3 320kbps: 22 hrs alkaline, 17 hrs rechargeable; 13 hours 20 minutes; 40-16,000 Hz

MP3 192kbps: 22 hrs alkaline, 17 hrs rechargeable; 22 hours 20 minutes; 40-16,000 Hz

MP3 128kbps: 22 hrs alkaline, 17 hrs rechargeable; 33 hours 30 minutes; 40-16,000 Hz

MP3 48kbps(MONO): 25 hrs alkaline, 19 hrs rechargeable; 89 hours 25 minutes; 40-14,000 Hz

MP3 8kbps(MONO): 25 hrs alkaline, 19 hrs rechargeable; 536 hours 0 minutes; 50-2,000 Hz

Note that this also means a fresh set of alkaline batteries will often provide significantly longer recording time than rechargeable batteries. This is especially true for rechargeable batteries that have been repeatedly recharged over a long period of time. Overall, this recorder has very good battery life.

Additionally, the recorder has a memory card slot that accepts either a Memory Stick Micro (M2) card of up to 16 GB, a microSD (FAT16) card up to 2 GB, or a microSDHC (FAT32) card from 4 GB to 32 GB. Along with its internal 2-GB of flash memory, I have also equipped my recorder with the Sony Memory Stick Micro M2 16 GB Flash Memory Card with USB Reader. When used with the two largest-capacity memory cards supported by the recorder, I can boost the recording time for each of the recording formats as follows:

LPCM 44.1kHz/16bit: 24 hours 15 minutes (16 GB), 48 hours 40 minutes (32 GB)

MP3 320kbps: 107 hours 0 minutes (16 GB), 214 hours 0 minutes (32 GB)

MP3 192kbps: 178 hours 0 minutes (16 GB), 357 hours 0 minutes (32 GB)

MP3 128kbps: 268 hours 0 minutes (16 GB), 536 hours 0 minutes (32 GB)

MP3 48kbps(MONO): 715 hours 0 minutes (16 GB), 1431 hours 0 minutes (32 GB)

MP3 8kbps(MONO): 4294 hours 0 minutes (16 GB), 8589 hours 0 minutes (32 GB)

And if this is still not enough recording time, I simply switch out the filled-up memory card and insert another empty memory card.

One big difference between the supported recording formats of the previous ICD-SX750 recorder and this ICD-SX712 is that Sony has discarded support for the five LPEC recording formats (STHQ, ST, STLP, SP, LP). LPEC is a compressed-sound codec that is proprietary to Sony. On the ICD-SX750, using a LPEC recording format allowed me to add a bookmark during playback of an LPEC recording, and I could also assign a 1-star, 2-star, or 3-star "priority" ranking to LPEC recordings. These were two nifty little features that I could not use with WAV or MP3 recording formats. But recording with LPEC format also meant that I needed extra Sony software in order to convert the LPEC format to a standard, and more portable, MP3 or WAV format (a function that was performed by the Sony 'Digital Voice Editor' software that was bundled with the ICD-SX750). So now, like Sony's professional line of digital audio recorders, the ICD-SX712 only supports industry-standard LPCM (WAV) and MP3 codec formats.

After inserting the batteries, I set the date and time, select the English/Spanish/French language option, and then I am ready to go!

ѾѾѾѾѾ I can either record the recorder's 2-GB built-in memory, or I can record directly to my installed memory card. Five folders are initially created in the memory card, along with the five initial folders in the built-in memory, and the folder structure is slightly different between the two. I can switch between recording to the built-in memory or to the memory card by pressing either the folder button or the [MENU] button. A nifty 'Cross-Memory Recording' option allows me to automatically continue recording onto the memory card after I have filled up the 2-GB built-in memory. The maximum number of folders that I can have is 400, and the maximum number of files is 4074.

ѾѾѾѾѾ The recorder has flexible file functions, including protecting files from being erased or edited, and moving or copying files. I can rename any of the folders using one of the 16 pre-defined folder name options.

ѾѾѾѾѾ Unlike the ICD-SX750, which had two stereo microphones and a mono/directional microphone located in between the two stereo microphones, this ICD-SX712 only has the two unidirectional stereo microphones. Both microphones have a directional response pattern when they are both pointed forward in a 0-degree angle, and they mimic a cardioid-like microphone response when I use my finger to flip them to face outward at a 120-degree angle for stereo recording. The 0-degree microphone position, with both microphones pointed forward, is great for uses like personal dictation, interviewing someone, or recording a speaker who is either in a conference room or auditorium, where you want to focus the recording in one direction. The 120-degree microphone position is great for recording all surrounding sounds in stereo, such as recording a group meeting or recording a live music rehearsal or concert. The stereo recording does a great job of picking up all left-right and near-far spatial information.

ѾѾѾѾѾ Recording parameters have been simplified with five 'Scene' presets. There are basically three recording parameters that you need to think about in order to use this recorder effectively: the recording format mode, the recording level microphone sensitivity, and whether to record in directional or stereo mode. All of the recorder's other features can be investigated later.

A new 'Scene' function now takes the uncertainty out of adjusting recorder settings to suit your recording situation, and it makes it tremendously easy to quickly switch between five different sets of recording parameters. The five 'Scene' modes are referred to as "Meeting", "Voice Notes", "Interview", "Music", and your own custom "My Scene" preset. For each of the five 'Scene' presets, you can define its own combination of settings for record mode, record level, low cut filter and limiter settings, voice-operated recording, and synchronized recording options. The default settings for each 'Scene' allow for the foolproof recording of clear, natural-sounding results for each situation. You can also edit the defaults for each scene to suit your needs. The 'Scene' terminology reminds me of the 'scene' modes that are widely used in digital cameras, especially the user-friendly point-and-shoot digital cameras, for using pre-programmed camera exposure setups for people who do not want to (or know how to) adjust the settings by themselves. Essentially, you get five easily accessible presets of recording parameters that you can edit, modify, save, and access. On my older Sony ICD-SX750 model, if I wanted to shift gears between personal dictation and recording a live music rehearsal, I had to go into the recorder's menu functions and manually switch my recording parameters each time.

The following describes the five 'Scene Select' menu options, the default recording parameters that are used, and some of my own recommended changes that I made using the 'Scene Edit' function.

✵ "Meeting" :: To record in a variety of situations, such as recording a meeting in a spacious conference room or a lecture in an auditorium.

Default setup: (REC Mode: MP3 192kbps), (REC Level: Medium), (Low Cut Filter: On), (Limiter: Off), (Voice-Operated Recording: Off), (Synchronized Recording: Off)

Notes: Point both microphones forward at a 0-degree angle to focus on one speaker, or at a 120-degree angle to record stereo sounds such as a group meeting where there are multiple speakers from different directions. Set 'REC Level' to "High", instead of "Medium", if the speaker is far away or not speaking loud enough.

✵ "Voice Notes" :: To record dictation with the microphone in front of your mouth. This is also the 'Scene' to use when recording dictation that is to be transcribed into text using Dragon NaturallySpeaking.

Default setup: (REC Mode: MP3 128kbps), (REC Level: Low), (Low Cut Filter: On), (Limiter: Off), (Voice-Operated Recording: Off), (Synchronized Recording: Off)

Notes: Point both microphones forward at a 0-degree angle. Because Dragon NaturallySpeaking needs high-quality recordings for accurate speech recognition transcriptions, I change the default 'REC Mode' to the better "MP3 320kbps".

✵ "Interview" :: To record another human being interviewed.

Default setup: (REC Mode: MP3 192kbps), (REC Level: Medium), (Low Cut Filter: On), (Limiter: Off), (Voice-Operated Recording: Off), (Synchronized Recording: Off)

Notes: Point both microphones forward at a 0-degree angle. I also use this 'Scene' when recording a phone call where I point the recorder at the phone's speakerphone.

✵ "Music" :: To record live music.

Default setup: (REC Mode: LPCM 44.1kHz/16bit), (REC Level: Low(Music)), (Low Cut Filter: Off), (Limiter: Off), (Voice-Operated Recording: Off), (Synchronized Recording: Off)

Notes: Position the microphones at the 120-degree angle to record stereo sounds from all directions. The 'REC Level' microphone sensitivity setting of "Low(Music)" is better for loud music such as band practice or rock music, or when your audio input is a CD player. A 'REC Level' setting of "High(Music)" is better for acoustic instruments, or when your audio input is a tape recorder or portable CD player.

✵ "My Scene" :: Use to store your favorite settings.

Default setup: (REC Mode: LPCM 44.1kHz/16bit), (REC Level: Manual, with the recording level set to "10"), (Low Cut Filter: Off), (Limiter: On), (Voice-Operated Recording: Off), (Synchronized Recording: Off)

Notes: This can be used to store your favorite combination of settings, especially if you use a manually-adjusted recording level that you have configured and want to re-use later. When manually adjusting the recording level, the 'Limiter' function is activated to prevent distortion due to sound bursts being too loud.

All of the 'Scene' recording parameters are displayed on the backlit LCD screen using words or graphical icons.

ѾѾѾѾѾ Compared with the previous ICD-SX750, the ergonomics of the new ICD-SX712's layout have been significantly improved, making it far easier to access all of the recorder's many functions, even if I have not used some of the functions for many months. The ICD-SX750 had a nice LCD display, but I had to access everything through its [MENU] button and all of its record/playback buttons were located on the recorder's right side. On the ICD-SX712, I can now directly access the folder structure from its own dedicated button, the 'Scene Select' option has its own [SCENE] button, and except for the 'VOLUME', 'ERASE', and repeat buttons on the right side, all record and playback buttons are located on the front below the LCD display. The recorder has a 4-way rocker switch that is very intuitive to use, and the menu system makes use of a layout that groups all functions under 5 main tabs, 'Recording', 'Playback', 'Edit', 'LCD Display Settings', 'Recorder Settings', and some tabs use sub-tabs.

ѾѾѾѾѾ A small LED indicator light turns green during playback and turns red during recording operations.

ѾѾѾѾѾ For recording a meeting room that has the background hum of an air conditioner, recording a speaker at a convention or auditorium where there is extraneous noise, or recording someone speaking during gusty winds, setting the 'LCF (Low Cut Filter)' to "ON" will cut out frequencies below 200 Hz (e.g. room ventilation, machinery humming, wind).

ѾѾѾѾѾ There is also an 'NOISE CUT' slider switch that can be used during playback of the recording to cut out both high and low frequencies, thereby focusing more on the midrange frequencies of human voices. This frequency filter can be set to either a "Maximum" or "Medium" mode to enhance human speech and reduce distracting background noise. Compared to the previous ICD-SX750 model's 'NOISE CUT' function, Sony calls their newly-developed filter an 'Intelligent Noise Cut' because, unlike other digital voice recorders that simply cut high and low frequencies, 'Intelligent Noise Cut' analyzes the fingerprint of background noise, removing unwanted frequencies to leave recorded speech sounding crisp and natural. This is highly useful, for example, if you are interviewing someone on a noisy sidewalk.

Sony advertises that this new ICD-SX712 model has a newly-designed acoustic isolation that cuts the transmission of mechanical and handling noise to both microphones from the main recorder. So its microphones are supposedly better decoupled from the main recorder body. But you really should have all of your recording parameters already thought out and set up before you begin recording as various movements of the recorder's switches, pressing of buttons to access and change various recording menu functions (via the backlit LCD screen), flipping the microphones between their 0-degree and 120-degree positions, or sliding of your fingers across the unit will still get included into the recording, even if the microphone sensitivity is set to "Low". Ideally, have the recorder fully set up before the recording, and use the included stand to prop up the microphone. Unless the situation warrants it (e.g. interviewing someone while standing up), try to avoid holding or adjusting the recorder once the recording has started.

ѾѾѾѾѾ Instead of a slider switch that is labeled "On/Off", the on/off switch on this recorder is labeled "POWER/HOLD". To turn the device on or off, I slide the switch to the left. Or I can slide the switch to the right to place the recorder in "HOLD" mode. The "HOLD" mode holds the recorder in whatever operation mode I am using (play, stop, pause, record). When the recorder is on "HOLD" during a certain operation, I cannot accidentally interrupt that function when I carry the recorder around or hold it in my hand. So using this "HOLD" slider switch protects me from inadvertently pressing the "pause" or "stop" button during an extended recording session since the recorder will not respond to the pressing of any buttons while it is in "HOLD" mode.

ѾѾѾѾѾ Whereas the previous ICD-SX750 had a 'DIVIDE' button to dynamically divide an ongoing recording into separate messages, the ICD-SX712 now has a more-flexible 'T-MARK' button to add track marks during recording, playback, or pausing operations. Track marks are used in both Sony's Net MD MiniDisc recorders and their professional audio recorders, and they function like bookmarks in a recording. I can add up to 98 track marks per recording file. I can use these track marks to jump to different positions in the recording during playback (especially useful for lengthy recordings), or I can use these track marks to later divide the recording into separate messages. I can also combine/add or overwrite sections of messages and recordings.

ѾѾѾѾѾ I can monitor an ongoing recording by listening to it through headphones connected to the recorder.

ѾѾѾѾѾ I can connect an external stereo microphone or external equipment such as a CD player to record from those sources. The recorder provides "plug in power" for use with an external microphone.

ѾѾѾѾѾ The recorder has a voice-operated recording function, which starts recording when sound is detected, and pauses when no sound is heard, so recording halts during silent periods.

ѾѾѾѾѾ The recorder has a 'SYNC REC' synchronized recording function that is similar to the voice-operated recording function, but is intended for connecting the audio output of other equipment (e.g. CD player) to the recorder's microphone jack. The recorder then pauses when no sound is input, and starts recording when you start playback on the external equipment's sound source.

ѾѾѾѾѾ The recordings can be played back either through the recorder's built-in speaker or through the headphone jack (headphones will obviously provide much better playback sound quality).

ѾѾѾѾѾ One playback function that I use a lot is the 'Digital Pitch Control'. On the older ICD-SX750, this allowed me to change the playback speed between 200% and -75% of a recording's normal speed. This is really useful for me when I am learning a really complex guitar riff that I recorded from a live rehearsal; I can slow down the recording to learn from it and practice along with it at a slower pace, and even at the maximum "-75%" slowdown in tempo, the pitch is not changed, which is awesome for music applications. And for a lecture where the speaker is talkiinnngggg reaaallllyy slow, I can speed it up without having the speaker sound like a Chipmunk. On this new ICD-SX712, this feature has been made uber-cool for musicians and singers, because in addition to being able to adjust the playback speed/tempo between 25% (or -75%) and 300%, I can also independently adjust the sound by up to six halftones (semitones) higher or lower. Using the 4-way rocker switch, I press the left/right buttons to decrease/increase playback speed, and I press the up/down buttons to change the key higher/lower. The LCD display shows an X/Y-axis graph of how you are adjusting the sounds, and the sharp/flat icon (#/b) is displayed if you are changing to higher/lower halftones.

ѾѾѾѾѾ The recorder has six very useful playback style settings: "Pop" (emphasizes middle ranges, ideal for vocals); "Rock" (emphasizes high and low ranges for a powerful sound); "Jazz" (emphasizes high ranges for lively sound); "Bass1" (emphasizes bass); "Bass2" (emphasizes bass even more); "Custom" (you can design your own custom sound using its 5-band equalizer).

ѾѾѾѾѾ Another cool playback feature, useful for lecture, seminar, and crowd environments is the 'Digital Voice Up' (V-UP). This function boosts and amplifies the low-level sounds in the recording, great for hearing low voices that were recorded from a distance out of range or away from the direction of the microphone. If you are recording in a spacious auditorium where you are seated towards the rear, you can set the 'REC Level' to "High" to record a sound located far away from the recorder or a low sound. And then if you still need additional volume from the low-level sound, during playback of this recording, you can use the 'Digital Voice Up' function at either its "Maximum" or "Medium" strength.

ѾѾѾѾѾ The recorder has an alarm clock function to play back a recording at a specific date and time.

ѾѾѾѾѾ A new and very useful feature that Sony added is that I can now search for a recording based on what date it was recorded. From the menu, the 'Calendar' option will display a monthly calendar, and the days when a recording was stored will be underlined on the monthly calendar display. So if I want to retrieve recordings of music rehearsals on a particular weekend or a Monday morning work meeting, this feature makes them easy to find!

ѾѾѾѾѾ When I plug the recorder into my computer using the supplied USB cord, the device looks like a 2-GB flash drive, with various folders containing the .WAV (for LPCM recordings), or .MP3 files. If the recorder's memory card slot has a Memory Stick Micro (M2) or microSD/microSDHC card installed, I can also access these folders just like any other external storage device; in this case, the built-in memory and memory card will display as two separate drive letters. I can use the recorder's flash memory simply as a USB flash drive to store text files onto it if I wanted to. And I can just drag-and-drop the files from the recorder's folders onto my computer's hard drive.

ѾѾѾѾѾ Using the Windows-only (not Mac-compatible) 'Sound Organizer' software, I can transfer files that I have recorded to my computer to manage and edit them. I can also transfer music files and podcast files stored on my computer to the recorder. I can also access the same editing and playback functions that are on the recorder itself, such as adding track marks and dividing a recording into pieces or using the 'Digital Pitch Control'. With Dragon NaturallySpeaking voice recognition software installed, I can also start the transcribing of a recorded speech file from within the 'Sound Organizer' software. I select the recorded speech file that I want to transcribe, select the 'Dragon' menu option, Dragon converts the recording into text, and I make corrections in the pop-up 'DragonPad' Notepad-like text editor to both correct the transcription mistakes that Dragon made and to further (hopefully) train Dragon to learn and adapt from the corrected mistakes. 'Sound Organizer' also has rudimentary CD-burning functions that let me create an audio CD, MP3 CD, or data CD from the recorder's files. Even though this 'Sound Organizer' software is not Mac-compatible, Mac users do not need this to transfer the files from the recorder onto their computer.

One of the 'Sound Organizer' software options lets me start up Sony's great 'Sound Forge Audio Studio' software. HOWEVER, Sony no longer offers this bundled with their latest and greatest ICD recorder. Arggh.

My previous ICD-SX750 was bundled with a Windows-only 'Sound Forge Audio Studio 9 LE' that is geared towards music editing and production. This "LE" version is the "lite edition" of Sony's industry-standard two-channel audio-editing program for Windows, with some useful extras thrown in, and a nice $60+ package if you were to buy this software separately. With Sound Forge Audio Studio, I can perform a variety of digital audio editing functions: save and convert in many formats; change sample rate and bit depth; edit, cut, paste, fade-in/out; set markers and regions within a recording; apply frequency equalization adjustments, swap channels, and even play the audio in reverse. The "version 9 LE" comes with 11 sound processing effects that I can apply to the audio such as chorus, delay, reverb, wah-wah, and distortion. There is also a 'Vocal Eraser' plug-in which tries to remove the vocals from the mix to make a karaoke version of a song; this works with varying degrees of effectiveness. I can archive vinyl recordings and use its 'Vinyl Restoration' noise reduction and 'Audio Restoration' features to adjust the amount of clean-up of clicks and pops and unwanted hiss. Although this software does not offer true multi-track mixing, it does allow me to mix external audio tracks into a recording. And although this is not a video editing tool, I can edit audio files and then attach them to video files. I import the video file, and then edit the soundtrack by scrubbing, as if I had a jog/shuttle control, using the [J], [K], [L] keys on my keyboard to reverse, pause, or forward the playback. When I am finished with my audio editing, I can then burn a CD from the application, or I can also extract audio tracks from a CD for use within the application.

But it appears that Sony is now only bundling the "LE" version of their great 'Audio Studio' software with their more-expensive line of 96-kHz/24-bit Digital Field Recorders. I was hoping that they would bundle a "LE" lite version of their 'Sound Forge Audio Studio 10', but I have to purchase that separately... or just continue to use my existing 'Sound Forge Audio Studio 9 LE'.

NOTE: My review does not end here, but continues onto the 'Comment' section of this review. Amazon does not let me post my entire review in one piece, so I split it into two pieces :-( (continue to the 'Comment' section to keep reading :-)

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Sunday, August 24, 2014

Coby DVD-207 Compact DVD Player

Coby DVD-207 Compact DVD Player
  • Slim, compact, easily moveable DVD player Plays DVD-Video (NTSC and PAL), MP3 CD, and JPEG image CD
  • Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1-channel surround sound through coaxial digital-audio output (for use with optional AV receiver and speaker system)
  • Offers universal (AC 110 to 220V) power supply
  • Includes full-function remote control
  • Measures 7.8 x 1.4 x 6.3 inches (W x H x D)

I purchased a Coby DVD-207 locally from a retailer because of the awesome price. They had it with a $20 mail in rebate that made it a hard deal to pass up. I purchased one and quickly went back to my dorm room to set it up. While unpacking it from the cardboard I noted that the entire unit feels rather flimsy. I was easily able to get the wires plugged in, and I started it up. I put a normal, store purchased DVD in and turned the unit on. There were some grinding noises from within the unit and it took between 3-5 seconds before it started playback. During playback the audio and video would randomly skip, making the movie all but unwatchable. I put the DVD into my laptop and it played back without any issues. I tried several other DVDs and audio cds and found them all to have the same playback problem. I quickly called the store back and spoke to the manager, they said that several people had the same problem with this model and they would exchange it for in store credit. So, after only owning it for a few hours, it went back to the store. I am glad I dodged that bullet and got rid of it before it died and was not in the store's warranty. If you read the warranty information from Coby when you unpack the unit, you will realize that they don't have any interest in fixing or replacing a defective unit (My unit's warranty required that I pay for shipment both ways and also pay a fee for returning a defective unit...) By that point, to get a replacement for a broken unit, you end up paying more than you did in the first place. Do yourself a favor, spend a bit more money and get something that is higher quality, it will last longer and larger companies have more consumer friendly return policies.

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I bought this DVD player thinking that I would give it as a gift to my friend. AS of March 8/9 2005, it still says pre-order but 5 minutes after a checked-out, it's status is already shipping soon. I guess it was shipped on the same day because I received the item by March 11.

So, I opened the box and set-up it up.. it's so small, I love it. The media that I tried was DVDr and the picture at the TV was ok but there would be some milisecond stop from time to time. It seemed that the DVD could not read smoothly the media on it. And the dvd makes a loud noise. You can hear the disc spinning inside it 8 feet away from it. If it's not the DVD, it should be something else.

All in all I would not suggest the DVD to be your main DVD player. Its performance is mediocre. I'll keep mine however as a spare in case of DVD player emergency :-) . For 32 bucks, it's worth keeping it. I'll try to find another another dvd player for my gift to my friend though.

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I bought this item because I had a special space requirement that benefited from this unusual top load design. The unit would not select tracks, skipped over the menu screen, and made the aforementioned grinding noises. I took the same DVD-R and it played flawlessly on my one year old Sony DVD player. This is my first Amazon return despite many purchases. Not worth your time even for the $19.99 I paid with free shipping and I guess the manufacturer agrees. The in-warranty repair requires pre-paid shipping and $6 to cover return shipping so by the time you pay to ship the item, a warranty repair costs more than half the item cost.

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I purchased this player via the net and in my opinion it's not worth it... but for the price what do you expect.... true to the fact it plays everything...but it skips and sticks alot....i even tried a brand new dvd out of the wrapping and it sticked....it's not worth it.....

i hate this thing! i can't return it or coby won't replace it. when i put a dvd in, it reads the disk and then it will say crazy stuff like 'open' or 'no disk'. no other dvd player will do this, becuase this is a cheap piece of crap! i bought it because it's so small, and the price was really low. well, YOU GET WHAT YOU PAY FOR! this was a total waste of my money, i can't get it fixed and i can't sell it knowing what a piece of crap it is. i would like to break it into a million pieces to relieve my frustration with it.

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Q-See QSDR04RTC-320 4 Channel H.264 Real-Time Security DVR

Q-See QSDR04RTC-320 4 Channel H.264 Real-Time Security DVRIt works a lot better than my old QSD004. I have it all configured and port forwarded to my Internet IP with its on port. I can view it from the Net anywhere I wish and can control the settings. One thing I did notice is the web manager interface uses ACTIVEX, which was a pain is the *** at first. Im a big firefox fan and use that browser..so now i have to use explorer to view my system. I bought a very cheap 500gb sata drive for this at newegg for 40 bucks. Good system for the price and lots of features. I recommend it, would have got 5 stars but email setup seems not to be functional at this time..see below.

Con: I can not get the Email Setup for motion detection to work at all, I have tried over and over, everything is configured correctly. It just doesnt work..I'll update later if this changes.

UPDATE: I just upgraded the firmware also, It gives a lot of options to view view smartphone..mine was an android. It works with my android phone great using the A-see app from the market on an android device. Okay..heres the bad news.. the firmware seems to have messed up the EMAIL notification..Buzzer sounds wont work anymore also.. My father has this model..we both have contact QSEE to find out if the problem will be resolved..but as some of the other posts on here..Their CS SUCKS... it used to be great when I had a previous model..but we got no answers..no returns AND still have a defective product with certain features not working...I've tried reflashing the same firmware again but have the same results in NO functionality with those features..... So the firmware has a plus for mobile phones but then negative and taking away needed features....

I'm about to go to a new brand of product perhaps when I look again for a newer one next year.

Good Luck..last post.

UPDATED!!!! Feb 2011..

Update on this item, I upgraded the firmware to the latest..when I did the email and buzzer stopped working.. I contacted customer service which actually upgraded the firmware in two weeks and posted it on there website with the fix from my problem. I was very impressed with what they did just from my problem. The email function works..but the buzzer doesnt still. I hardly ever use the buzzer function anyhow, this might be actually a device problem without the firmware upgrade i believe. I am not to worried with that fix as much as the email. I am updating this to give you more of an idea of how it has performed.. Also one other things.. when you have a residence with numerous trees outside which move or leaves..if you turn up the brightness on the the dvr for that camera..it filters out the movement and still gets any motion such as a person without false alarms. A little personal hack I found messing with the settings. :) Until later... :)

I bought this dvr to replace my dvr that died after 4 years of continuous use.. This unit runs 4 cameras which is plenty for me. I did some research for ease and price and this unit stood out.

All 4 cameras hook up easily and I had a picture up rather quickly. I did have to contact support because the directions were not specific enough for me to understand on how to make each camera work on motion only. When I first started up the dvr everything was being recorded. They were quick to answer with a email with directions i totally understood. So beside that little snafu everything went pretty well.

I have not connected it to the internet as of yet. That is next on my list. When I get time to do it I will repost my experience with that.

OH, one last thing the dvr has like a rubber coating on it. Its great for not slipping out of your hands but Im not sure about dusting it. I live in a horse town with so much dirt and dust everywhere. Its smooth but not like dust metal.

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Did a firmware upgrade and it bricked the DVR.

I copy pasted my live chat conversation with these folks but Amazon wouldn't post it. Suffice it to say that I was on hold for half an hour while I would occasionally hear such silliness as...."The System is slow today" or "I'm getting that information from another co-worker".

They would never come back on the phone after I got connected, or it would ring once and just go dead. I was finally able to get an RMA but they "forgot" to send a shipping label. The DVR was one week old.

I googled their customer service reputation and it was not good.

I returned it to the retail store where I bought it. I ended paying 30 bucks to do so.

I will say that before the upgrade the system worked great, but I needed the ability to view my cameras remotely through a Droid phone so I needed the new firmware. I build computers so a firmware upgrade is something I'm extremely comfortable performing.

Good product till you need service.

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Got unit in 3 days. Great service from Amazon...

Easy to plug in.

The one question I could not find anywhere in the maunal, or on line, was how long will it record for with the 320 ghz that is installed.

OK here is it. About 332 hours,with cid recording. I know someone else has been wondering.

Easy to use, Does everything my old lorex dvd unit does not. Easy to search.

I was not able to get the motion detection to work, but it could be me,or my camera's quality, and I have never seen it work on any of the other stuff I have that have the same feature.

Probably useless where I live with leaves, dirt, bugs, stuff being moved by the wind.

No loss.

Frank

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Sunday, July 20, 2014

Dual Front & Rear Camera DVR Car Vehicle Dash Dashboard GPS Data Recorder 1.3M

Dual Front & Rear Camera DVR Car Vehicle Dash Dashboard GPS Data Recorder 1.3M
  • Dual cameras, one front view and one back-view, and the back one can rotate up to 20 degrees.
  • 140 degree front and 120 degrees rear facing wide angle lenses.
  • Split screen modes to view both cameras simultaneously.
  • G-Sensor functions. Support above 4GB TF card
  • Integrated real-time GPS records location, support GPS Map.

While the functioning of the video and gps seem to work fine, this unit has 2 fatal flaws. The camera itself is about a 2 inch x 6 inch diameter tube which is really kind of big to be mounted on your windshield. When you add the monstrosity of a window mount on it, it takes up half your windshield. REALLY DUMB design.

The other MAJOR fatal flaw is that the GPS module drains the battery and when fully drained, it resets the clock/date. On a full charge it took about 12-16 hours to drain the battery and it is much too inconvenient to disconnect the gps module every time you stop.

Another aspect that I do not like is the gps module is separate from the camera so you would have to have 2 cables running up the the unit. I did not really give it a good test because I sent it right back.

Sure seems like someone could make a really small, inexpensive car dvr...

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This camera does not come with a micro SD card. You have to buy a micro SD card and reader, but it's simple to find at Best Buy, Walmart, etc. I purchased a 32 Gig Micro SD, plugged it into the reader and my PC automatically formatted the disc. Once you insert the card, the camera auto starts. If you see russian or other language, simply click MENU and select the chat box icon, then select language. Once you install in your vehicle, place the 12 volt power adapter into an AUX power slot that powers on when the vehicle is strated...this will cause your camera to auto-activate each time you start your vehicle. This model doesn't have Infra-Red nighttime capability, but does take good images of night-time driving. The images are stable and GPS locator also records location and spped which you can view during playback. Relatively cheap camera with good operation and clarity for the money.

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this item is same as X3000. this is not designed to use in USA due to time zone is different which you can not adjust local time.

I tried call many times but once sold no Tech assist. After I used about 6months it does not record at all. this item is shipping from Asis. Do not waste your money !!!!!

Monday, July 14, 2014

Archos AV400 80 GB Video Player / Recorder and MP3 Jukebox Player AV480

Archos AV400 80 GB Video Player / Recorder and MP3 Jukebox Player AV480
  • Archos 500648 AV480 80 GB Video Player / Recorder and MP3 Jukebox Player
  • Record your favorite video programs--up to 320 hours on 80 GB hard drive
  • Connects to TVs, VCRs, and cable/satellite receivers
  • Watch video on 3.8-inch LCD screen
  • Store and play MP3, WMA, and WAV digital audio files

Actually, I am very much astonished from the reviews written on the AV480 here on amazon as well as on other sites.

Since this device is no cheap at all, i had to run an extensive survey trying to evaluate this equipment. And all the feedback was very discouraging.

All the reviews said that the AV480 fails much and doesn't work and stuff like that. But, since i was desperate to have a large (more than 50 GB) portable media device and i couldn't find other choice (May be except the iPod, and the Zen) i decided to take my chances and try one.

Let's cross our fingers:

I have it now for around a 1.5 months, and this piece of art is really amazing.

I tried almost every possible combination of features together to check if it is working. And yes, i admit that i have extensively tested it.

I connected it to my computer, and it worked fine, nothing needed to recognize the AV480 as a USB 80GB harddisk.

I ran up to 10 copy operations of large data from the PC to AV480 (2GB) simultaneously and with 3 copy operations from the AV480 to the PC. This test was done all together to randomly test the scheduler (OS) of the AV480 and does it que the data in a correct manner or not. With these threads opened, the odds should be very high that the disk will fail in one of them. But, amazingly it went through very smoothly. So I am now pretty sure from the OS is rigid.

The other tests were rather easy, i tried to run MP3's on the unit and sucking the battery dry. Trying to check when the unit abnormally or urgently shutdown, and expecting a failure when booting it, i didn't have any problem. The unit when just charged, started up very normally.

I tested recording as well (Audio only) and it is very clear to me.. It records to WAVs, but there is no problem. Any ripper will change that to MP3's.

I still have the video recording test to go. I didn't try that yet, though i believe that it will pass fairly.

Ok, looking very impressive with the above tests, i tried to be picky, and try to catch anything bad in that device:

1. The battery charging looks very primitive. When you charge the unit, it just charges over the level it is originally at. Meaning: If you have a total empty battery, charging in 4 hours. Then a half empty battery will charge in 2 hours, a 1/4 empty battery will charge in 1 hour and so on. I think that this way the battery will experience memory effect. Meaning that for a half battery charging, the next time the battery will tell the unit that it is empty only after a 1/2 battery discharge. Though my unit is not experiencing a memory effect, but this rather takes long times.

2. The unit power connector is sloppy. Using the charger that came with the unit, it is very easy for the charger to get disconnected from the unit if you accidentaly pushed the unit a bit away.

3. I don't know if the power connector is a standard size! I tried buying a car charger from RadioShack. The charger didn't fit in the unit. Actually the unit needed a little longer jack to fit in. The jack at RadioShack was short, and when you push it hard in it contacts the power, when you release the pressure it disconnects.

4. The design was meant to be elegant, but the finishing quality isn't that elegant. If you look from the side of the unit you can see the light of the LCD.

5. The carrying case is very premitive. It has no place to carry the earphones with it. And it is very hard to reach the buttons when the unit is in the carrying case.

6. The recording unit comes with a very large bunch of wires that makes the connection with the TV and Sound system in my room even more harder and messy :)

7. Archos' customer service SUCKS! When i was researching for this unit, and found the discouraging reviews and found a more encouraging reviews on the AV380 i asked them if they still support the AV380 (because Archos' site is the only place that doesn't sell the AV380!). And till now i have no answer back :)

Conclusion:

It is a very efficient device with couple of drawbacks that can be solved by firmware upgrades.

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I must say i'm very surprised by the reviews below; about them not working after a little use. I'm also worried, because now i'm wondering if mine will break soon. I've had no problems in about 3 months that i've owned it... hopefully if it's lasted this long then i'll be OK for the long term.

My experience with it is great. I'm sure you know all it's features, so i'll just list some complaints (nit picks):

The shell is quite delicate. You must handle it with care or you may ding it.

In the dark it can be a little difficult to feel out the buttons; they don't stick out very far so it helps if you can see the buttons well.

I wish you could record "audio" in MP3 format. Currently it records in a format that yields a huge file size.

When you fast forward a video, you don't know how far you've gone until you stop fast forwarding. It screen doesn't update as you fast forward.

If you get video from the internet, or elsewhere, you must convert it to a specific format that the AV400 can read. The package comes with very easy to use software, but if you're converting lots of videos, it can be time consuming.

I would like the photo viewer to have more options... for example, i think it would be great if it could show a "histogram" of a photo, so you can make sure a photo is exposed correctly.

The LCD gets dark if viewed at a high angle. If viewed directly on it, too low, or too far right or left, however, the quality is great! But i'm sure that's just a limitation of LCD screens.

So far I am very happy with it, and I can live with my little complaints. I'm just still hoping that my unit will continue to work well for a long time...

John

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I love the AV480 when it works.

However, I've gone through 3 units already. Each one has had its hard disk break within 1 week of use. Unfortunately that was enough time for me to record about 60GB of ripped DVDs (now all lost).

Has anyone had this device work for more than a week?

I was extremely careful with it and it still broke. On the other hand, I've purchased one of those Microsoft Portable Media Centers. That has withstood much harsher handling. Unfortunately it is only 20GB. I like the AV480 more, but I wish it would work for more than a week.

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Like many others, I first thought that the AV-480 was the "King of all electronic devices". At first use, the integrated photo, video, and audio capabilities appear to be second to none. The user interface is quite intuitive and the quality of the audio and video is excellent. The video recording capabilities net a file that is about twice the size that it should be; but the playback quality is awesome.

Why then do I rate this device at only two stars. Unfortunately the AV-480 has been a single use device for me. Each Sunday evening, I copy my movies, photo's, and mp3's onto my AV-480 and before I board my outbound flight on Monday morning, I receive the famous "cannot read hard drive" message. In order to restore the unit back to a working condition I have to format the hard drive and wait until I return from my travels to load all of my data back on the device. I am about to purchase an 80 Gig external hard drive to carry on my trips so that I can restore all of my AV-480 data from the external hard drive to the AV-480 via my laptop in flight. Thus increasing my initial $800.00 investment to over $1,000, all in the name of in-flight entertainment.

I have also purchased the AV-420 based on the reviews. Supposedly this device is more reliable. I intend to use the AV-420 device for domestic travels and only carry the AV-480 plus the soon to be procured external hard drive with backup files for the aforementioned AV-480 when I travel internationally.

The bottom line, for $800.00 you should not have problems like the ones that you find described here. It is useless to send the device back to Archos because the next AV-480 that you receive will have the exact same set of issues. When Archos finally resolves the hard drive issues on the AV-480, it will be the most advanced media device on the market without a close second. In my opinion you should wait until Archos admits that the AV-480 has a hard drive problem and publishes a fix for that problem before making the decision to purchase one. Until then, you should just take your $800 to Vegas and gamble there, the odds will certainly be more in your favor.

I purchased the AV 480 a week before Xmas. Despite all of the negative reviews on this product, I have yet to experience any problems. The model has seemlessly recorded several movies and at least twenty CDs. With that said, I have about 72 GB left. I can probably get fifteen more movies and 100 more CDs on it. This product is great. On trips, you no longer need to carry your DVD player, DVDs and MP3 player separately which saves a great deal of packing space. This is the perfect all in one media player.

Also, there have been recent upgrades on this product from the Archos website which may have alleviated any prior snafus.

As the manual suggests, it is best to download Windows Media Player 9. I don't know whether the machine accepts any other players.

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Sony SLV-N88 4-Head Hi-Fi Stereo VCR

Sony SLV-N88 4-Head Hi-Fi Stereo VCR
  • 4-head hi-fi VCR with plug-and-play setup
  • Commercial skip, 60-second flash rewind, and multilingual onscreen menu
  • Digital autotracking adjustment; 8-event/1-month programming timer
  • Front and rear composite inputs, 1 set of composite outputs, and coaxial connector
  • Hi-fi stereo recording and MTS stereo broadcast reception

First of all. Reading all the previous reviews about the clock being 21 sec in a week late and others gets me thinking. Personally , don't care about seconds per week ratio.

Nextplayability of some tapes. I used to own a video store so I still have lots of tapes left: old, used, retaped. Everything works. But one thing is for sure. I paid $89 for this VCR and I know what to expect. I also have Mitsubishi top of the line , bought 4 years ago for almost $360. And tell you the truth, you cant expect your Mercedes 290 to perform like Mercedes 500. The same with this VCR it gets the job done. It even played the tape that I couldn't play on my Mitsu(the screen was blue, because this Mitsu it very sensitive to some kind of tape imperfection). So it's well worth the money and don't wory that it doesn't have S-VHS. All the tapes hollywood still makes is VHS , because it's standard. and there will not be otherwise.

So if the price is right for you , just get it.

I'd give it 5 stars but it's just not a five star product.

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i have used a vcr just like this one for about a year with no problems it is a good machine for the price. i have read other reviews saying it cant play certian tapes i have never had that problem. i really had questions about what they were talking about. the only thing i can figure is maybe they got ahold of a defective machine.

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I bought this unit because the reviews I'd seen online suggested it had the best picture out there. The picture is good enough (though I haven't yet tried to play older LP tapes), but I'm not sure it's worth buying. The only feature (not counting head quality and the like) that it has over my 10-year-old Hitachi is VCR Plus+, which requires a lot of setup to remap the stations to local cable services. Compared to the old Hitachi, the features are generally harder to use and the menus are just as clunky. Unlike the Hitachi, this unit cannot be set to display the current time if a tape is loaded, and its timer display options are surprisingly sparse.

Worst of all is the internal clock. The time must be accurate for any programmed recording to work correctly, whether that be a VCR Plus+ recording or a manually-entered one. In theory, this unit automatically checks its time against a broadcast time signal whenever it is turned off. However, despite numerous attempts to use the auto-time setup, it never did find a time signal on my cable service. It may be that there is none, despite the two good PBS stations in my area; setting the clock manually is not all that difficult. However, the clock *loses time*. In my latest check, it lost 21secs over 7 days. This is not a great amount of time at once, but over the course of a full season it will play havoc with program recording.

The customer service people were very friendly, but since I am able to read the simplistic manual, they were useless, as their "technical support" seems to consist of people reading the manual to callers and trying to find five different ways of telling the caller to try the same thing. In several calls, and speaking to several people in each call, I did not once get connected to a person with any degree of actual technical knowledge. The unit is warranted on parts for one year but only 90 days for service, so I was told that to get my unit "fixed" I would have to pay $59 and they would give me a refurbished replacement. (I neglected to see if asking for the "resident geek" might have gotten me someone more helpful.) Their website is a textbook example of uselessness its idea of a FAQ is to enter the "troubleshooting" options from the manual as if they are real questions. The "knowledge base" isn't any such thing.

It's a shame. This unit has a lot of promise, but it doesn't quite deliver. The support just isn't there. If you do elect to purchase it, compare the time to a neutral source (such as the Weather Channel) at least once a week. It's a good enough performer, with a good picture, but do be careful.

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I have bought much audio, video, and other gear over the years. I run a recording studio, and I edit video for a living. This VCR is in my living room, though... this is NOT part of a studio, just home use.

This VCR is a piece of junk when it comes to playing VHS tapes. Tapes are hit and miss. I just recently purchased a brand new tape which won't play properly at all, manually adjusting the tracking doesn't work either. BRAND NEW tape.

I thought it was the heads, I thought it was defective tapes, until one by one tapes wouldn't work, or maybe they'd work for a little while and then stop tracking properly.

The worst part is it took me until the unit was out of warranty to realize it was the VCR and not the tapes, due to the fact that it's rarely used in this era of DVDs.

I have been a user of Sony gear for a long time, both their professional gear and their consumer gear... and honestly, if they care so little about their customers to release a product THIS bad I'm going to think twice next time. It doesn't matter that it's a cheap VCR, it STILL should play prerecorded tapes. There is NO excuse.

At the very least, DO NOT buy this VCR. I understand some people don't have problems, and I respect that, but there are enough negative reviews here to give you pause. BUY another brand.

The unit is a little over one year old. Realistically used about three dozen times in that span because it is in our den and we have other units in other rooms we typically watch TV in. At about nine months old the video playback became awful: it was very "scratchy" and the audio disappeared. I thought it must have been my kids' Disney tapes or perhaps just needed a head cleaning. Tried new tapes and cleaning the heads with a dry cassette that also demagnetizes. It didn't cure the problem and I wrote it off to the fact that the head cleaner was several years old. Unfortunately, I didn't purchase a new head cleaner until after the warranty expired and met with the same results. Called Sony, explained the pre-warranty expiration problem and was told I could get a refurbished unit for a flat rate; about $89 (for a freakin' unit that costs about $100 new!). Unbelievable! I pressed the tech to speak with his supervisor to overlook the expiration in light of my house being filled with Sony products and my long history of purchasing only Sony. I was told they would review my claim. Still waiting three weeks later I called to follow up and was told they do not have any record of my complaint. What a joke for this company. They again said a senior customer advisor would review my claim and get back to me. Still waiting and they won't answer my e-mails. {Gave up on the phone totally useless service.) Well, Consumer Reports rates Toshiba highly. Bought a DVD/TV combo that works great. We'll see in a year.

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Tonium P666 Pacemaker Pocket-Sized DJ System, 60 GB

Tonium P666 Pacemaker Pocket-Sized DJ System, 60 GB
  • Portable DJ system lets you mix, play and perform music anywhere, anytime
  • 1.7 inch TFT Display with 166 ppi screen resolution
  • 60GB Harddrive-holds approximately 15,000 tracks in 128 Kbps AAC format
  • Built-in rechargeable lithium battery, play time up to 15 hours when fully charged, mix mode up to 5 hours when fully charged
  • USB 2.0, Pacemaker editor computer software, quick start guide included in the box

I've owned the Pacemaker since it was originally released and have been incredibly pleased with it. Early versions of the firmware were a bit buggy but it has been a solid performer for the past six months with regular updates freely available.

The interface is intuitive and easy to use after a 2-3 hour learning curve (mostly to break iPod interface habits) and the sound for the variety of formats supported is superb. You can record your mixes on the device and move them to the desktop application and vice versa. The sound controls work very well and reliably. If you like manipulating music and are looking for a device that takes you beyond the iPod experience, this is highly recommended.

The pacemaker social network for sharing mixes is nice as well. I just wish there were a way to download and play them on the device (even if for only a limited period of time).

I can't speak to its utility as a live DJ device as I've never used it in that capacity, but there seem to be quite a few folks that do in the pacemaker.net forums.

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Just got my Pacemaker a few weeks ago and I'm really enjoying it! I had a couple of Numark (monster) TTX tables with a Stanton xfader when I was younger and the biggest pain was just getting the things around. Even with CDJs its pretty tough to move gear around. So the Pacemaker works out really well as far as portability goes!

Loading MP3s is not too hard, beware if you have a lot of older iTunes tracks, you'll have to *upgrade* them to the DRM-free format for $0.30/track to get them on to your Pacemaker, just something to consider. That can set you back hundreds if you have a good sized music collection tied up in iTunes.

You've really got to know your music because when you scroll through the tracks, you only get track titles and BPM displayed. Once you start playing the track, you get all the info. I havent played with the mix editor software too much but it installed easily seems easy enough, not as intuitive as iTunes but it shouldnt give you too many headaches if you're just trying to get music on the Pacemaker.

As far as "gigging" with it, if you're going to a party with a bunch of your friends and want to entertain, this is good but you're tethered to the thing all evening, you might be better off spending the $500 bones on some good music, making some really great playlists on your iPod and just letting it go to shuffle. Then you can hang with everyone at the party.

If you got really sharp with it (I am not...working on it though) its pretty reasonable to play 3-4 hours of play with lots of different music using pitch bend and effects to really get some unique flavor into what you're playing. After using it LOTS the past few weeks, I'm pretty confident it wont lock up on you in the middle of your set. It hasnt ever locked up on me and i've done some pretty impressive combinations of inputs that the folks at Tonium probably never counted on.

The auto beat matching is stupid easy, but if you sync a 85 BPM hip hop track with a 130 BPM dance track you'll get just what you ask for ;-) The pitch bend is a cool tool too but depending on the bit rate/compression of your MP3s (i guess those are fancy words for 'quality' of your MP3s) your music will sound really degraded as you slow it down.

So Im not going to pretend that it replaces the feel of vinyl or the slide of the fader but as far as just getting hours behind your music and getting to know it and thinking up good mixes, this is a great player.

Sorry for the random thoughts, I really love it though and its becoming my go to MP3 player just because of the ability to get into my music in ways that I only used to be able to with my old gear. $500 is something to think about but dont fret about the quality and finish of it, its just as sharp as anything Apple's put out (and i loves me some Apple stuff). Hope this is helpful!

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I bought one of these when they first came out last year (the 120GB version), and I've been very happy with it. At the time I had no prior mixing experience, but I found that using the Pacemaker was pretty intuitive and I caught the bug so thoroughly that only three months later I bought my own set of full-size turntables and a mixer.

Pros: I love that it's small enough to fit in my purse or satchel and go anywhere. I travel a lot, and it makes that 8-hr flight a lot easier to cope with! I can also plug it in to any old rig and put on a decent mix if I want to. I don't go through music withdrawal any more and I'll never buy another MP3 player. It's so loaded with features I haven't yet mastered them all.

Cons: The touchpad is fiddly, simply because the device is so small. You have to be really careful where you place your fingers or you risk e.g. accidentally hitting the crossfade bar and wrecking your mix. I find the EQ gestures have been hard to get used to. I can't imagine dancing around with this thing it's too easy to hit the wrong area of the control face if you're not paying attention! Other DJ friends of mine think it lacks a certain gravitas that a booth provides.

Overall: a great toy. I'd recommend it.

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I discourage buying the product because the manufacturer (Tonium from Sweden) refuses to interact with customers. There is no support at all. If you buy this product and it doesn't work as expected you are on your own. If it breaks or need replacement batteries the only option is to toss it in the bin and to write off your money.

That said, I loved my pacemaker until it broke. It's very sad that a great product that it is is dying but it is. I think tonium is already out-of-business. Today the company is nothing but a letter box in Stockholm that nobody cares for. Apparently the people that ran Tonium took the money into another venture which is the the letsmix.com site. The people behind tonium and letsmix.com are the same, but when you contact letsmix support for pacemaker they refuse and deny that they have anything to do with the tonium. Even though the names of the people are identical.

:( I repeat: I discourage bying this product.

[Bedroom DJ]

I have had my Pacemaker for about 1 month and it is simply superb. Normally I spin on two CDJ-400s and a DJM-800 usually with music off my USB sticks I purchase my music in .wav format and tag it using media monkey.

[Secret] I go to the club every night and the DJ is great because he always plays the music I like. [/Secret]

WHAT IS THE PACEMAKER?

This is two music players in ONE that allows you to mix music (beatmix, master tempo, pitch shift) in real time as if you had two turntables/decks.

HOW DOES IT WORK?

While one song is playing through the line output, the next song is chosen through headphones, then mix the two songs in real time with all magic DJ touches at your finger tips. Record your set on the fly to replay later and export. [Lame] Export to file is to .ogg format at 199 kbit/s this is very average quality [/Lame] or to [Cool] web-online at the tonium site so that others may download. [/Cool]

WHY DID I BUY THIS?

I hate my IPOD/iTunes: they do not seem to play nice with other formats and service providers. More importantly, I wanted to experiment with music mixing when away from my set DJ set up ie: on vacation or when I need down time at work! If my Pacemaker broke today I would buy another one tomorrow. NB: I actually own the 211 model the 120 GB flavor with a charger, a USB a-b cable, and a 1/4inch TRS to RCA cable.

PACEMAKER HARDWARE INTERFACE

Exceptionally parsimonious and very effective: These people are definitely geniuses the controls are easy to master and truly reflect the way I think when I am on my CDJ-400s; I played a near flawless set the first three hours I owned it!!! FXs include HI-LO cut, Treble, Mid, Bass adjust, Echo, Delay, Reverb, Roll, Wah, TranceGate, Crush, Key, and Beat controlled FX (8,4,2,3/2,1,3/4,1/2,3/8,1/4,1/8). That IPOD scroll wheel doesn't look so impressive compared to this.

PACEMAKER INTERFACE

The OS on the pacemaker is truly innovative and puts to shame almost every other DEVICE interface on the market. It is easy to find a song in a collection of thousands of songs through the interface it is that easy to use: filters for artist, album, BPM, genre, year, and more with a very rapid and intuitive implementation for the mood of the moment, surprising, nobody does it like this. Apple will copy this.

Also, set up crates on the fly and have it transfer over to your PC.

COMPUTER SOFTWARE INTERFACE song/collection management

Management of the song list on the device is very easy, and totally under your control. None of that crazy IPOD auto sync disaster stuff here. The software does not move files around on the hard drive of your computer. Total respect. The file compatibility is broad: WAV, OGG, MP3, FLAC, AAC plus more!!! (Check the specs but it makes the IPOD look like a cereal box toy).

[Lame]COMPUTER SOFTWARE INTERFACE mixing tools [/Lame]

All mixes recorded on the fly with the PACEMAKER will be transferred to your PC. To be honest so far I really haven't gotten the gist; I transfer the mixes but the software is so lame I just can't make it work; lining up the beginning of a bar is near impossible they have a long way to go. This mixing software is poorly documented and does not accept audio FX plug-ins. Output is severely limited to .ogg huh???. [Tip]I prefer mixing music in musicmeister for QUICK mixes that output to full CD quality. [/Tip]

PACEMAKER FIRMWARE AND COMPUTER SOFTWARE UPGRADE

From what I can figure out from the early reviews in the DJ mags and the online forums TONIUM have spent a tremendous amount of energy bringing the software / interface up to speed with what would be considered reasonable features on the pacemaker device hats off. Having owned this in June 2009 This is one polished interface and easy to use.

PERKS

A whole bunch, like; adjusting the output to the impedance level of your headphones; instead of mix mode it can be played like a standard music player, the whole online community, (and other cool tweaks)

BUMMER

This device is recognized as a USB device by the computer but the file names are modified (like on the IPOD) and are not readable unless you have superpowers. [Using good software like mediamonkey on my PC Tagged MP3 and WAV files can easily be identified and copied from the pacemaker to another device (like a good friends computer) Sweet]

Last comments

Value (very high) for cost(high) is good; don't let the price throw you off. Music nerds don't wait you will be stunned.

This product is innovative and unique it is simply the best portable music player on the market and a portable all in one DJ set-up; only Gandalf could improve this. The computer software for mixing music is not useful you will have to buy another [June 2009}.

Peace, love, good times,

[/Bedroom DJ]

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

D-Link 16 MB MP3 Player

D-Link 16 MB MP3 Player
  • 16 MB MP3 player and digital voice recorder
  • Expandable using SmartMedia memory cards
  • Customize sound with equalizer presets
  • Includes earphones and PC cable
  • Requires a parallel port connection to the PC

Six months ago this product had an awsome price to value raito (I paid 30.00 after the 60.00 mail in rebate), however times are changing. Memory prices are falling, and you can buy a player with 64 MB for 90.00 to 200.00 , and many of these include a radio and USB connection. The point, this is a good product, but I would suggest you consider another, more advanced product.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Honeywell Ademco IPCAM-WO Outdoor IP Camera for Total Connect

Honeywell Ademco IPCAM-WO Outdoor IP Camera for Total ConnectA must if you using the Honeywell Tuxedo. Picture quality is acceptable and camera itself is very durable. The only problem is if you use WIFI and change your router settings, camera configuration must be reestablished through a wired connection again.

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Friday, May 2, 2014

Zmodo 16 Channel CCTV Surveillance H.264 DVR With 8 Outdoor Waterproof Security Camera System 1TB H

Zmodo 16 Channel CCTV Surveillance H.264 DVR With 8 Outdoor Waterproof Security Camera System 1TB Hard DriveGood for price and shipper sent out fast would suggest them to anyone. Works great set up easy. Love it

This CCTV Surveillance system is ideal for the small to medium sized facility that is looking to start with a simple eight-camera setup but have the ability to expand as needed. The system is very reasonably priced for the quality of the hardware and overall functionality. Zmodo has done a good job with this system and it serves its purpose very well. So far, this buyer is nothing but happy!

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I really like this unit for the price....it takes reading the help on the web site for specific questions that arise when setting it up, since we all have our personal view of what it should do and how....the defaults are what they are. One key item for wanting to access through the net is to turn that feature on, its defaulted not to....I suspect for safty reason. great bang for the buck imo

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I bought this product and it worked for 6 weeks. I lost all my money because i live out of the USA.

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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

IVIEW-1800HDII High-Definition Up-Convert Media Player with USB and Card Reader Function (Silver)

IVIEW-1800HDII High-Definition Up-Convert Media Player with USB and Card Reader Function
  • High resolution HDMI interface 480i/480p/576i/576p/720p/1080i
  • One 6.7 feet HDMI cable is included with the giftbox
  • Suppers MPEG4, AVI, DVD, DVD-R, DVD-RW, CD, CD-R, CD-RW, JPEG, MP3
  • USB interface: Plays music and movie by connecting MP3 Player and external card reader
  • Card Reader: Simply slot in your memory cards and play music and movie

This DVD player skips all the time and cannot read burned DVDs or CDs. It died completely after a week of daily use. The company will not honor warranty (you read right, there is NO warranty!) on their products so I am stuck with a very big and ugly paper weight!

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I got this dvd karaoke player from my friend as a gift and I absolutely love it! So why do I love it so much? Well, the first thing I noticed was that all my DVDs looked alot sharper and cleaner now thanks to the upscaling function, which changes the resolution from 480 to 1080p. Another thing I loved was that this player will basically play anything you want(DVD+R, DVD-R, DVD+RW, AVI, JPEG, ETC.), not to mention the fact that it also works well as a karaoke player. The design of the DVD player itself is very sleek and stylish and looks great with my other HD components. As far as reliability goes, I've had this player since March and so far, I haven't experienced any problems with it (knocks on wood). Thus, I highly recommend this player for anyone looking for a upscaling DVD player with the karaoke function. Oh...and did I mention the fact that this player is all-region, meaning that it will play DVDs from anywhere in the world!

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This product is terrible. Out the of box the DVD loading tray does not function with the manual button on top of the system. The batteries that come with the remote control are terrible. Im not even sure they are real batteries. I put in duracell batteries and I was able to open and close the DVD tray but the manual button on the system still does not work. I contacted the seller and they were quick to refer me to the company. I called the company and I had to leave a voice mail for the tech support. The thing is such low quality. Spend some more money to get a descent functioning system.

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I have no problem with this player playing all region discs. I have had the player for several months but recently tried to get the SD slot to work and cannot. Maybe there is something I am not doing correctly. If someone knows the answer, I would love to hear it. Thanks.

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Well as every Karaoke lover knows a good player MUST have seperate volume controls for the backing track (Music) and the vocal..Sorry to report this does not!

You would need a seperate amplified output for your microphone(Vocals)

If your looking for an upconverting DVD player this is a good choice.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Defender DF10W 60ft Camera Extension Wire

Defender DF10W 60ft Camera Extension WireExcellent Product! This product enabled me to place my security cameras anywhere I want! Defender DF10W 60ft Camera Extension Wire

When I purchased the Defender DVR/camera system I was concerned about the lenght of the cables included with the kit(60ft.) because I needed more lenght for some camera locations(backyard,terrace,etc.). I was surprised to find the cable being sold separately here and the service and shipping were excellent.

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I ordered a couple of these, but Amazon was unable to deliver them in a timely manner. I got the SVAT CVW62 version instead, which are white instead of black. Electrically they are the equivalent cable. The CVW62 cables are working great with a Defender SENTINEL1 system.

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the wire fits perfectly with the security cameras i have. it been about 7 months since i bough it and so far no issues at all.

and they wires been outside through the whole winter and summer so. its worth buying

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This product arrived quick. I am pleased with the shipping. A must have for long cable runs. Works with my video surveillance system.

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Night Owl Security LTE-DVR8 DVR with Smart Viewing

Night Owl Security LTE-DVR8 DVR with Smart Viewing
  • View your cameras anywhere in the world from your smartphone or tablet
  • Compatible with all 3.5-Inch. SATA HDD (up to 2 TB)
  • Free "Night Owl Lite" application

I got this to replace a 7-year old Honeywell DVR that was no longer sending video. My cameras were already in place. As another reviewer noted, there is no real secure place to mount your hard drive. I used stick-on velcro. So far, so good. Hooking up the cameras and connecting the unit to a monitor, and setting it up to record, was super simple. The internet interface was harder. The big thing that's not clear from the manual is when you change things (IE, input IP addresses and passwords) you have to reboot the DVR. This is not obvious because you get a nice message saying your changes have been saved, but then it still doesn't work. Once you get the right info inputted, and saved, and you reboot, everything is fine. The app for phone viewing (I have an android phone and my husband has an iphone) works great. I did send a couple of questions to tech support by email and got reasonably prompt and helpful responses.

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bought zomodo before this unit, had to return unit trouble with some of the channels from the beginning. Replaced the zomodo with a night owl, been using for 2 months with great results, would recommend this unit. Sets up very easy without the instructions. I purchased without a hard drive, no problems installing a hd. It will accept any HD.

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When I received this DVR, I opened the case to install the hard drive, and discovered that there was nothing in the case or inside the shipping box for mounting the hard drive, just a few smudges on the case wall. The SATA cables were there, yes, but that left the hard drive free to bounce around inside the case. Surely I could expect brackets and screws for installing an HDD?

And if they couldn't get this right, could I really expect the product itself to last?

Friday, January 17, 2014

ABC Products® Battery Charger for Li50B Li-50B Li50C Li-50C suits Olympus Mju 1010, 1020, 1030 SW,

ABC Products® Battery Charger for Li50B Li-50B Li50C Li-50C suits Olympus Mju 1010, 1020, 1030 SW, Mju Tough Series 6000, 6010, 6020, 8000, 8010, 9000, 9010, SP-610UZ, SP-720UZ, SP-800UZ, SP-810UZ, SZ-10, SZ-11, SZ-12, SZ-14, SZ-20, SZ-30, SZ-30MR, SZ-31, SZ-31MR, TG-610, TG-620, TG-810, TG-820, Smart D-750, D-755, D-760, VG-170, VR-340, VR-350, VR-360, XZ-1 Digital Camera etc + DM-3, DM-5 Voice & Music Recorder etcI purchased this charger to accompany the battery I bought in another review. I don't like charging batteries in the camers.

The charger is compact and yet versatile, works great. Great company to buy form.

This works just fine. It didn't take too long to arrive. Has a lot of different options, so very helpful! Not expensive at all! Anyone can use it.

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Thursday, January 16, 2014

Sharp VLWD450U MiniDV Digital Camcorder w/2.5'' Viewfinder & Built-in Digital Still Mode

Sharp VLWD450U MiniDV Digital Camcorder w/2.5'' Viewfinder & Built-in Digital Still ModeThe quality of the 26x zoom is incredible, and even the lower powers of digital zoom that this camera has are incredible. Imagine being able to clearly read 3pt type from 15 feet away on the viewfinder. And that's just the beginning.

Unpacking the box, I found out that I was glad that I'd purchased a USB smartmedia reader. The only cables supplied were the standard dubbing cables and a serial transfer cable. Standard serial transfer being slow as it is was not an option. That cable is now stashed collecting dust.

The camera was easy to set up and get running right away. I popped the 8mb smartmedia card in its slot, the battery in it's little hideout, and a new blank tape in the tape compartment. The single hardest thing was figuring out how to attach the lens cap to the hand strap. Velcro is your friend (the hand strap pad velcroes shut over the strap adjustment, by undoing the strap pad, you slip the cap cord onto the strap. A very neat, if unintuitive, design)

Still pictures: 640x480 is limiting, but I mostly use this for web work and don't like to publish anything much larger than this. I would like to have some extra area though to make sure I get everything and crop down. Quality is superb in good direct lighting, decent in low light or indirect light.

Video Capture: Surprisingly clear. The camera, as with all such devices, makes a good webcam if you have the right interface hardware. I use a WinTV card for vid capture and discovered that the 450 will 'follow' action around if you leave it still on the tripod. Good for those people with a cam setup that move around a lot. It will automatically pan within its scan area just a few degrees to each side, but enough, usually, if set up correctly.

VCR Mode: A neat feature that I was totally unaware that the machine had until I got it home. If you plug the 'output' ports in so that they're receiving information instead of sending it, you can record on the camera like a VCR.

All in all: I'd recommend this little cam. My only complaint was being limited to 640x480 on still pictures. Cabling was standard and not unexpected. Optics and zoom are exceptional, 26x optical zoom is a big plus. IR and zero-light features are great. Still pictures, though limited in size, can fit 500-1500 depending on quality on a 64mb SM card.

4 1/2 stars

I had the opportunity to use this camera to shoot a wedding ceremony. Never having used a camcorder before, I was hesitant to agree to record such an important event and moreso on a new untested camcorder.

Although the instruction manual was a bit confusing at first, once I got the basic functions down the rest fell into place. The camera is lightweight enough so arm fatigue isn't an issue, yet sturdy enough to hold up to jarring when mounted on a tripod. The auto-focus worked quickly during zoom in/out with no distortion at all when zooming in. All controls are well placed, each with a different feel so the user can concentrate on the subject instead of searching around for the right button.

I found the display screen to be a little small and in certain lighting positions difficult to see. On the plus side, the screen flips so the user may be in the recording and still have control over it. Additionally, there is a very small remote control which will work up to 16 feet from the camera which removes the need to constantly be behind the lens. This was probably the best feature of this camcorder.

The rechargeable battery which came with the camcorder kept it's charge for only 90 minutes or so and took at least that long to fully recharge. Although there is an adapter to run the camera from an electrical outlet, I would definitely suggest purchasing the extended life battery which is an optional purchase.

With many advanced features which I didn't go into in writing this review, the Sharp Digital Camcorder is an excellent buy for the beginner or advanced user.

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I looked long and hard at different cameras in this price range, what I found was you needed to spend $ for a really good camera. This camera is very good. There are excellent low light features that make a world of difference in how your video comes out. I am disapointed in the actuall quality 460,000 CCD. I was going to buy the Panasonic for that reason but that camera had no low light features. After my first made video I could see how dark it came out while shooting in the house, which I though was good light? Don't be fooled that low light features are not important. I reshot the video with the Gamma on and it was as clear as daylight. The controls are easy to use a little cumbersome but after a few minutes you can figure them out. It is light easy to operate once you set the time etc. The extended microphone also makes a great difference in the sound quality. It picks up every sound clear as a bell. The still pictures are horrible so do not buy this camera for that feature. They are grainy and distorted and not good at all. They are easily transferred to your computer though even without a USB cable. I wish they added some video editing software but you can't ask for everything for this price. I am very pleased and would reccommend this camera.

Please purchase the bundled "Pinnacle DV software" and IEEE1394 card version 7.0. It is about $ but awesome and well worth a few extra bucks. You can make full fledged movies with music, voice over, editing, text, etc all with a click of a mouse!

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Pros: Price is definitely was the deciding factor for the features that came with it. Great battery life, light and easy to use

Cons: Have problems during playback, After 15 minutes of playback, display starts breaking up and eventually turns to blue, will play AFTER awhile. Secondly, SHARP's CUSTOMER SERVICE and TECHNICAL SUPPORT is NO GOOD, USELESS and are only trained to send your camera to the NEAREST Service Center which is 300 Miles away at my own EXPENSE (less than a month old camera, brand new)

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The Sharp VL-WD450U has a firewire port, but you need to go to the computer store to get the cable. I have a Mac with the iMovie editing software. Apple doesn't list the Sharp camera as one that is known to be compatible with the iMovie software. I plugged it in and it works fine.

Also, the software that comes with the camera is PC Windows oriented, so I couldn't use it. But reading the still images onto your hard drive via a serial port is not a great idea anyway. I went down to the computer store and bought a nice little USB device that plugs into the keyboard USB port ... You insert the 8MB SmartMedia card into it and it acts like a floppy drive. Each image is a .jpg file. Just click on the image and it pops up on the screen.

The camera is working fine so far. The 27X zoom is great. (Use a tripod) The only problem is finding a local source to buy a backup lithium battery. They don't sell them at the drug store or Wal-mart.