Hi Jonathan

I still use MiniDV 'cus I've not updated my camera equipment (still saving for 
that HD prosumer kit!).

MiniDV camcorders work best with Firewire connections.  Years ago, you used to 
have to buy a IEEE1394 Firewire PCI card to connect and control your 
camcorder, but if you've got a modern PC, the chances are you've already got a 
Firewire port.  

Connecting the camcorder is one thing, but controlling it is another.  The 
best piece of software for this is a fairly useless video editing tool called 
Kino, but it is able to control and capture your MiniDV footage.

A few years ago, there was a change in the Linux IEEE1394 stack, which meant 
that depending on what distro you used, you could struggle getting your PC to 
recognise the camcorder with Kino, and hence much fiddling was required.  If 
your distro is up to date, then it will use the new stack and you should be 
fine.

Assuming you've already got everything you could possibly need;
        1. Install Kino
        2. Connect Camcorder to PC via Firewire cable (sometimes call iLink).  
This 
should have been provided with your camcorder.
        3. Start Kino and switch on your camcorder - make sure it is in 
playback 
mode.
        4. Click the "Capture" tab in Kino.  If all goes well, you should see 
that 
the timecode display on your camcorder matches the display on Kino.  If you 
press the fast-forward or rewind button in Kino, your camcorder should respond 
accordingly.
        5. From this point its just a case of capturing the footage you need 
for 
editing later.  Capturing does require a reasonable amount of system memory to 
avoid any dropped frames.  I would suggest at least a Gig of memory should be 
free, so if you're a bit short on memory, make sure you're not running 
anything heavy duty like OpenOffice, Openshot or blender in the background.  
KDE 
should be fine, but if you have dropped frames, try running Kino under Openbox 
with RazorQT or LXDE.

Any problems or stuff you don't understand, then let me know.  Oh, forgot to 
mention: Captured video in Raw DV or DV AVI codecs will take up tonnes of 
space - about 4GB per 20mins.  So if you've got a couple of full tapes, make 
sure you've got a good  20-30 spare GB!

Chris

On Wednesday 09 May 2012 12:18:20 Jonathan Gowar wrote:
> On Tue, 2012-05-08 at 18:17 +0100, Christopher Sandles wrote:
> > My primary use of Linux is as a home user, with occasional dabblings
> > in video and photo editing. I've always been keen to demonstrate to
> > the "man on the street" how Linux can compare with Windows and OSX,
> > and I think a "newbie" section or Home Users bit could be useful. On
> > the same lines, maybe a SysAdmin section, or development area for
> > other aspects of Linux usage might be worth considering?
> 
> Using MiniDV (tape) capturing device?  I'd like to know how to do that.
> I've a old Sony PCE-9 I'd like to capture from!
> 
> 
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