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Can this work for me?
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Melly
Newbie
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19. August 2005 @ 20:45 |
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Good Eve All :>)
My PC is an aging Dell with a a 600
megahertz Intel Pentium III
32 kilobyte primary memory cache
512 kilobyte secondary memory cache.
Dell Dimension XPS
Pentium 3, 598 MHz , 384
RAM, a 80 GB & a 20 GB
HARD DRIVE,
with Win XP Home Edition
I also have a PIONEER DVR-A05U & I just
ordered Nero 6 Ultra.
If I were to upgrade my PC, what should
I upgrade to to be able to copy, edit with
ease & send my old VCR tapes to DVD quickly
& above all be able to get quality DVD's
within an hour per tape (no counting
editing time) is this possible?
Thank you for you valuable time,
Meliy :>)
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This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 20. August 2005 @ 09:05
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Melly
Newbie
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19. August 2005 @ 20:58 |
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OOOPS!!
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 19. August 2005 @ 21:05
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Minion
AfterDawn Addict
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20. August 2005 @ 12:23 |
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Well these days you shouldn"t have anything slower than a 2.0ghz PC with 512mb of Ram so do any Video Type Work....
You could Get a New 2.93ghz Celeron D CPU with a New Soyo Motherboard Right now on TigerDirect for $69(Canadian) which would be Plenty of Speed and all you would Need Becides this is say 512mb of Ram which would cost about another $70 so for about $150 you could Upgrade from your Lowly 633mhz to 2.93ghz for about $150 if you did the Upgrade yourself which is not very Difficult if you have a technicaly oriented Mind.....
Cheers
P-4 2.6ghz (Overclocked to 3.2ghz)
Abit IS7
1gb Dual Chanell DDR 400mhz
Zalman CNPS7000-CU Cooler(Modded with 50cfm Fan)
XFX Gforce 6600GT 128mb GDDR3 (500/1000)
Pinnacle DV500 ADVC Editing Card
RaidMax Scorpio ATX Case + 5 Led
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Frankwm
Junior Member
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21. August 2005 @ 22:50 |
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@ Melly:
You didn't mention what type of Video card you have. If you have onboard video, it probably won't handle fast video too well. You might need to add a decent video card to that upgrade.
Also, in addition to the power supply fan & the CPU fan, make sure your computer case has a cooling fan. CPU usage is very intense when processing video, which generates a lot of heat.
Also, you never mentioned how you intend to capture the VHS video from your VCR for processing.
Minion could probably recommend a decent integrated video/video capture card.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. August 2005 @ 08:57 |
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You can't capture video faster than realtime, so a 2 hour VHS tape is going to take 2 hours to capture.
If no editing is involved, you can add between 5 and 30 minutes for authoring (depending on complexity of your menu structure, and software used), and 10-20 minutes for burning.
You would have to capture directly to mpeg-2, otherwise you're adding between 30 minutes and 40 hours (per hour of video) to encode it, again depending on computer speed, and software used.
I would upgrade to (at least) a Sempron/Celeron of about 2 ghz or more, preferrably an Athlon/Pentium of at least 3 ghz or more.
1 gig of RAM.
2 SATA hard drives (one for the OS and programs, the other for captures)
Black holes are where God divided by zero...
Cheers, Jim
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Melly
Newbie
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22. August 2005 @ 13:27 |
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Thanks for your input everyone I think I hear you all loud & clear.
This PC sucks!
I won't even mention my video card because I know it is obsolete & I am being kind when I say that. :>(
Instead of buying a new PC in January 2005
(tax return time) I decided to purchase a cool
Lap Top and keep this PC relic to use for
storage & such. Since I love anything to do
with photography including video. The extra
storage will be useful.
After searching the web for info on the best
way to send my old VCR tapes to DVD edited &
labeled of course. I must say I am confused.
I have always dreamed of building my very own
kick butt PC. But before I decide to give
up the Lap Top plan I need to know a few things.
If I have a kick butt PC is it possible to:
1.
load any video (ancient or new) to my PC If so
what would be the most dependable hardware will
I need to accomplish this task? I don't mean the
most expensive either as I know sometimes it is
not necessary to buy the latest or the most
expensive but of course other times it is very
important to buy the best &/or the most expensive.
2.)
edit and label etc. any video tape (ancient or
new)? If so what is the best software for this
task?
3.)
copy the finished work to a DVD that will play
on any DVD player or on any PC that has a DVD
reader? What will I need to accomplish this task?
4.)
get DVD's with clear, smooth video?
What is the pros & Cons of a Pentium 5 &
the latest Anthlon?
What is the options for the BEST Video Card.(ancient or new)
Thanks,
Melly :>)
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Melly's PC:
Dell Dimension XPS
Pentium 3, 598 MHz
384 RAM
Maxtor Hard drive 20.42 GB
WDC Hard drive 80.00
Total Hard Drive:
100.37 Gigabytes
Free Space:
74.51 Gigabytes
Board: Intel Corp.
Bus Clock: 100 megahertz
BIOS: Intel Corp. A10 06/28/2000
NVIDIA RIVA TNT2/TNT2
Pro (Microsoft Corporation)
[Display adapter]
Win XP Home Edition
PIONEER DVR-A05U
Nero 6 Ultra.
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AfterDawn Addict
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23. August 2005 @ 10:56 |
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1.) This is dependant on software, not hardware.
2.) There are lots of editors, from ones that do simple cuts, to ones that do amazing things. How much money do you want to spend? They run from free, to thousands of $.
2b.) Labelling is also software controlled, with your printer.
3.) You need a DVD burner, which (usually) comes with the burning software. To get them to play in ANY player is impossible. You can only hope to get them to play in most, and there are standards in place. Encode, edit, author, and burn your disks properly, and they'll play in most.
4.) This is probably the most difficult. Start with an extremely good source, and you can do it with cheap hardware. Start with a blurry source (VHS tapes), and it requires much more work, as well as money.
The AMD Athlon 64 (not Sempron) is the best "bang-for-the-buck". A comparable Intel will cost double, and is not necessarily any faster or better.
You're going to need a capture device of some sort.
Any video card with 128 meg of onboard RAM (or more) should do. From the Radeon 9xxx series, or Geforce Ti/MX series will do nicely.
You don't need a $600 XFX card to do what you want.
Black holes are where God divided by zero...
Cheers, Jim
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n0v0n
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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28. August 2005 @ 05:29 |
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Melly...
Build your own...
It´s easier than you think!!
Look at www.pricewatch. com
Recommend ABIT motherboards, 1GB memory, 80 or 120 GB hard drive,
ATI video card, ATHLON XP 2600+ and/or 3000+, SONY DL DVD-R +R +RW recorder, and yes...how´s your budget...
Why build your own? BECAUSE YOU KNOW WHAT´S IN THERE...IT´S NOT PROPRIETARY AND BEST OF ALL YOU CAN DO WHATEVER YOU WANT WITH IT, YOU BUILT IT, YOU CAN TAKE IT APART, AND REDO IT AS MANY TIMES YOU WANT.
IT´S EASIER THAN YOU THINK!!!
Don´t buy nothing from COMPU-TERRA they are crooks.
n0v0n
every rule has an exception...
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Melly
Newbie
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28. August 2005 @ 21:41 |
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Hello rebootjim :>)
Looks to me like you covered everything!
Now I will start shopping & investigating
the software I will need. I also think I
need to do some studying. The hard work was
making up my mind to buid from the ground
up. That done I am excited about the
oportunity.
Thanks for your help,
Melly :>)
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Melly's PC:
Dell Dimension XPS
Pentium 3, 598 MHz
384 RAM
Maxtor Hard drive 20.42 GB
WDC Hard drive 80.00
Total Hard Drive:
100.37 Gigabytes
Free Space:
74.51 Gigabytes
Board: Intel Corp.
Bus Clock: 100 megahertz
BIOS: Intel Corp. A10 06/28/2000
NVIDIA RIVA TNT2/TNT2
Pro (Microsoft Corporation)
[Display adapter]
Win XP Home Edition
PIONEER DVR-A05U
Nero 6 Ultra.
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Melly
Newbie
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28. August 2005 @ 21:59 |
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Thanks n0v0n :>)
I will watch www.pricewatch. com & keep all
else you suggested in mind. Most of all
thanks for the enthusiastic factual post,
it was just whatI needed to remnd me how
exciting it will be to build a PC that will
be a perfect fit for ME & do it all myself.
I have dreamed of doing this for some time.
I feel ready to do this now.
Thanks again,
Melly :>)
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Melly's PC:
Dell Dimension XPS
Pentium 3, 598 MHz
384 RAM
Maxtor Hard drive 20.42 GB
WDC Hard drive 80.00
Total Hard Drive:
100.37 Gigabytes
Free Space:
74.51 Gigabytes
Board: Intel Corp.
Bus Clock: 100 megahertz
BIOS: Intel Corp. A10 06/28/2000
NVIDIA RIVA TNT2/TNT2
Pro (Microsoft Corporation)
[Display adapter]
Win XP Home Edition
PIONEER DVR-A05U
Nero 6 Ultra.
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