Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?


Go Back   Computer Help Articles > Windows XP Movie Maker
User Name
Password
FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1  
Old 01-05-2006, 07:05 AM
Diamond Jones
 
Posts: n/a
Default Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?

Hi,

I use a Panasonic DV NV DS65. When I record and playback on the camera or
linked up to the TV the picture quality is perfect but when I use Windows
Movie Maker to capture the video the quality of the picture is very jerky
and pixalated.

I use a Compaq Laptop with AMD Athlon 2400 chip with 500+ mb RAM.

A salesboy at Camera House said I need a Firewire card. I don't think so. A
salesman at Dick Smith Electronics said I need a better program than Movie
Maker. I'm not confident these gys know what they're talking about.

Personally, I think its because my laptop doesn't have a dedicated graphics
card.

I've tried capturing it on different screen sizes etc but it doesn't get
much better.

Anyone know the answer?

Thanks
D


Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 01-05-2006, 07:05 AM
dickmr
 
Posts: n/a
Default RE: Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?

Hi there....spend some time reading a bunch of the posts on here concerning
your problem and go check out PapaJohn's website...it is the best. The
first guy is correct, you should capture digital video with 'firewire'....if
you have a firewire port on your laptop you just need a cable, otherwise you
need a card as the salesboy said.
The guy who said you need a better program for sure doesnt know a THING
about it.
Did he happen to have a sale on Sony Vegas or Adobe Premiere at the time?!!
ha ha

When you capture and use MM, understand that the preview is in low
resolution to save resources and is not indicative of the final quality.
Your DS65 is a Mini DV camcorder and will have very good resolution. When
you get your movie edited in MM; save it in DV-AVI format is you are going to
burn it to DVD. But, as I said, you will learn a lot by visiting PapaJohn's
site and also reading various subjects in the 'help' file. Good luck! Oh,
just so you know, I have a half dozen of those so-called better programs, but
use Movie Maker 2 all the time cept when I need to 'film capture' my screen
or work with gif and flash files. It may be a somewhat less powerful, but
you mainly are only limited by your own ingenuity and invention.

"Diamond Jones" wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I use a Panasonic DV NV DS65. When I record and playback on the camera or
> linked up to the TV the picture quality is perfect but when I use Windows
> Movie Maker to capture the video the quality of the picture is very jerky
> and pixalated.
>
> I use a Compaq Laptop with AMD Athlon 2400 chip with 500+ mb RAM.
>
> A salesboy at Camera House said I need a Firewire card. I don't think so. A
> salesman at Dick Smith Electronics said I need a better program than Movie
> Maker. I'm not confident these gys know what they're talking about.
>
> Personally, I think its because my laptop doesn't have a dedicated graphics
> card.
>
> I've tried capturing it on different screen sizes etc but it doesn't get
> much better.
>
> Anyone know the answer?
>
> Thanks
> D
>
>
>

Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 01-05-2006, 07:05 AM
asdfyellow@hotmail.com
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?

I'm new to video capturing/editing/burning. I noticed that there was no
comment on whether it is necessary to have a graphics card as opposed
to "integrated" graphics. What do folks think?

Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 01-05-2006, 07:05 AM
Wojo
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?

Really doesn't make a difference as far as video capturing/editing goes. If
you have a poor graphics card then your video will simply look better on the
DVD than it does on your computer.
I personally am still getting along just fine with one of my computers which
only has a simple and cheap 16MB graphics card.
-Wojo

<asdfyellow@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1136397535.507587.252490@g43g2000cwa.googlegr oups.com...
> I'm new to video capturing/editing/burning. I noticed that there was no
> comment on whether it is necessary to have a graphics card as opposed
> to "integrated" graphics. What do folks think?
>



Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 01-05-2006, 07:05 AM
LVTravel
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?

Reply inline


"Diamond Jones" <kwanzaNOSPAM@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
news:43bb65a5$0$18198$afc38c87@news.optusnet.com.a u...
> Hi,
>
> I use a Panasonic DV NV DS65. When I record and playback on the camera or
> linked up to the TV the picture quality is perfect but when I use Windows
> Movie Maker to capture the video the quality of the picture is very jerky
> and pixalated.
>
> I use a Compaq Laptop with AMD Athlon 2400 chip with 500+ mb RAM.
>
> A salesboy at Camera House said I need a Firewire card. I don't think so.


Very true. Firewire will transfer data much better than USB. This could
account for the low quality of the picture.

> A salesman at Dick Smith Electronics said I need a better program than
> Movie Maker. I'm not confident these gys know what they're talking about.


May be true depending on what you are trying to do with your video. I have
used MM successfully to produce commercial quality video for DVD
distribution from weddings and charity events. I also have two other video
editing programs I use if WMM won't do the trick.


> Personally, I think its because my laptop doesn't have a dedicated
> graphics card.
>


Not normally an issue for video editing.


> I've tried capturing it on different screen sizes etc but it doesn't get
> much better.
>
> Anyone know the answer?
>
> Thanks
> D
>




Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 01-05-2006, 03:52 PM
Dan Corban
 
Posts: n/a
Default RE: Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?

The other replies hinted at this, but here it is with no beating around the
bush:
With every DV camcorder I have seen, capturing the video via USB causes the
camera to send the video in a converted, low resolution mode. Using a
firewire connection allows the camcorder to send the raw AVI video. This is
the raw video data stored on the camcorder and will be of the highest quality
possible. You can then take this raw AVI data and convert it to any format
you wish, using any program you wish (yes, even Movie Maker is up to the
task).

Save yourself any further headache and buy a firewire card and cable.


"Diamond Jones" wrote:
> I use a Panasonic DV NV DS65. When I record and playback on the camera or
> linked up to the TV the picture quality is perfect but when I use Windows
> Movie Maker to capture the video the quality of the picture is very jerky
> and pixalated.
>
> A salesboy at Camera House said I need a Firewire card.

Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 01-05-2006, 03:59 PM
Dan Corban
 
Posts: n/a
Default RE: Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?

The other replies hinted at this, but here it is with no beating around the
bush:
With every DV camcorder I have seen, capturing the video via USB causes the
camera to send the video in a converted, low resolution mode. Using a
firewire connection allows the camcorder to send the raw AVI video. This is
the raw video data stored on the camcorder and will be of the highest quality
possible. You can then take this raw AVI data and convert it to any format
you wish, using any program you wish (yes, even Movie Maker is up to the
task).

Save yourself any further headache and buy a firewire card and cable.


"Diamond Jones" wrote:
> I use a Panasonic DV NV DS65. When I record and playback on the camera or
> linked up to the TV the picture quality is perfect but when I use Windows
> Movie Maker to capture the video the quality of the picture is very jerky
> and pixalated.
>
> A salesboy at Camera House said I need a Firewire card.

Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
RE: Remote control and color quality Daniel Gurney Windows XP Work Remotely 1 01-05-2006 07:12 AM
photo story 3 picture quality georgemg Windows XP Photos 1 01-05-2006 07:11 AM
Quality of picture on DVD. not as good bc Windows XP Movie Maker 5 01-05-2006 07:03 AM
Re: Adding a picture to the 'Newspaper' title Joinarnold Windows XP Movie Maker 1 01-05-2006 06:50 AM
USB Mass Storage Device - This device cannot start. (Code 10) lobo201 Windows XP Hardware 11 01-05-2006 02:15 AM


All times are GMT. The time now is 01:28 AM.


Powered by vBulletin Version 3.5.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. SEO by vBSEO 2.3.2 © 2005, Crawlability, Inc.

Picture quality terrible - Is it my hardware?