sandgk;1174536; said:
shetuck -
On PC - viewing of 1080p - Yes, Viewing of 720p - Yes
On DVD - Viewing of 1080p / 720p - not possible unless played on a BluRay or HD-DVD Disc and player.
Okay. Gotcha. I get it now.
sandgk;1174536; said:
(Most regular DVD players are configured to take a lower 480 or similar resolution - standard DVD - and upconvert that to 720p or higher should playback on an HDTV be needed).
Wow... didn't know most regular DVD players run at 480. Sounds like 480 is a very reasonable "native" resolution to use, then, right?
sandgk;1174536; said:
If you want to play your material on a variety of TVs you may want to do this --
Record at preferred resolution (1080p or 720p)
Save media at full resolution.
Convert from highest resolution to lower resolution for making the DVDs - portable media.
Now the only issue becomes the resolution / FPS to use - I'd balance time as a higher requirement than FPS / 1080p / 720p. So whichever combo gives you the longest recording time, use that.
Yeah... space might end up being an issue. I'm recording on a pair of 4GB memory cards. A 12 minute clip I recorded at 1080p took up about 660 MB. I'm gonna be recording on-the-fly (I'll be in Istanbul, Turkey). My (piece-of-sh*t) Lenovo laptop only has about 20GB of spare hard drive space. So my plan was to record clips and basically dump them onto my hard drive at the end of the day, burn them on CDs/DVDs at the end of the day and start over the next day. I've never burned DVDs, so I'll have to play around with that too, because I can't have a 12 minute clip on a single CD.
So, since now that you've enlightened me that DVDs basically use 480 resolution native, I'm thinking about using the 740x480 60 fps setting on the camera (no HD, but D1) which will give me really good smoothness, not take up a huge amount of space, work fairly well on even basic DVD players, and not take up a huge amount of space on my laptop or require dozens (or maybe hundreds) or CDs for maybe 50 hours +/- of footage.
For special clips I can switch up to the 1280x720 HD at 60 fps - smoothness, slightly bigger files, HD native (for those DVD players and TVs that can handle it).
My bottom-line take-away is that the 1080p is overkill for me in this case.