-
Try "Generic DV Device". Worth a shot...
-
Take a look HERE for Part 1 of 6 parts with the answers you're looking for.
-
Looks like Brian is posting from a high school. Odds are his system(s) are software only.
-
-
I'm guessing that you have some type of feed from your source to your system via a deck or camera. AXP would allow you to do this with no problems, as I remember. For some reason the code was changed and you must now have the deck or cam in Record to allow the audio to pass through. The deck/cam must actually be recording, not just the "record"
-
If your PC keyboards are all PS-2 types, a few of these might do the trick. Good luck.
-
Sounds like you need a Time Base Corrector/Frame syncronizer at the output of the VCR. VCR playback is unstable by it's very nature. You might try playing back the VCR tape and recording it to a digital deck or camcorder, then capturing from the decl/camcorder. Good luck! Steve
-
I use my Z7 a lot in SD. The files are captured as AVI Type 1 files, which import quickly into AVID. For one on-going project I don't even bring the project to AVID but use another program to encode directly from multiple AVI files to one finished WMV file for upload to the client's server.
-
Create a photoshop 2.39 aspect ratio inside a 16x9 project & export with alpha. Import into AVID with " invert alpha" checked. Apply to new video track above your final edit.
-
[quote user="myeyeonu"]I think with respect Avid could be a little more concise with their specs and fill in the gaps a bit more as to what actually works and what will not, even with there stated models. [/quote] You have to realize that to test every varient of every machine would not be cost effective for AVID. I'm sure it's hard