digital8 to DVD Conversion London,Digital 8 transfer in the UK from just £25.00
Freshcut DVD provides a professional digital8 to DVD transfer or digital 8 conversion service.
Freshcut DVD is the authority in the UK when it comes to Video Tape to DVD conversion or Transfer. We use state-of-the-art equipment to make sure the job is done to the highest technical specification resulting in the best quality DVD that can be created from the original tape source. Freshcut DVD is based in London, UK.
This service includes
- Digital re-mastering of your digital8 Tape
- Audio level balancing and enhancement
- Picture enhancement
- Audio converted to Dolby Stereo
The resulting video streams are authored and burned to DVD. We can get as much as four hours on a single DVD with most customers remarking that the resulting video is clearer, sharper and sounds better!
Don’t let your digital8 memories fade away, preserve them with Freshcut DVD!
Trust Freshcut DVD to preserve your memories and make sure you know what you are buying! There are many tape to dvd conversion companies who simply plug your precious memories into low quality DVD recorders and send you the result. This is the inferior way to preserve your memories as no digital corrections can be made to the video or the audio. For more information see the benefits of using Freshcut DVD.
Some information on Digital 8
Digital 8 is a digital videotape format devised by Sony Sony (in katakana: ???) is a consumer electronics corporation based in Tokyo, Japan. It was founded on May 7, 1946 as the Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering with about 20 employees. Their first consumer product, in the late 1940s, was a rice boiler. As it grew into a major international corporation, Sony acquired other companies with longer histories, including Columbia Records (the oldest continuously produced brand name in recorded sound, dating back to 1888).
..... Click the link for more information. .
It uses conventional analog Hi-8 tapes, but records the video signal in digital form using the DV DV is a video format launched in 1996, which encodes video onto tape in digital format with intraframe compression, making it straightforward to transfer the video onto computer for editing. DV tapes come in two formats: MiniDV and DV. They record digital video compressed by a DCT method at 25 Megabit per second. As a computer file, this works out to roughly 3.5 MB per second. In terms of video quality, it is a step up from consumer analog formats, such as 8mm, VHS-C and Hi-8.
..... Click the link for more information. codec Codec is an abbreviation of "coder/decoder", which describes a device or program capable of performing transformations on a data stream or signal. Codecs can both put the stream or signal into an encoded form (often for transmission, storage or encryption) and retrieve, or decode that form for viewing or manipulation in a format more appropriate for these operations. Codecs are often used in videoconferencing and streaming media solutions.
..... Click the link for more information. .
Digital 8 camcorders preserve backward compatibility with Hi-8 by seamlessly playing the old analog tapes and transcoding In telecommunication, transcoding is the direct digital-to-digital conversion from one encoding scheme, such as voice LPC-10, to a different encoding scheme without returning the signals to analog form.
Note: The transcoded signals, i.e., the digital representations of analog signals may be any digital representation of any analog signal, such as voice, facsimile, or quasi-analog signals.
..... Click the link for more information. them to the DV format at the same time.
Sony has only manufactured Digital 8 camcorders. Separate videotape recorders have never been manufactured. The format has largely been supplanted by miniDV DV is a video format launched in 1996, which encodes video onto tape in digital format with intraframe compression, making it straightforward to transfer the video onto computer for editing. DV tapes come in two formats: MiniDV and DV. They record digital video compressed by a DCT method at 25 Megabit per second. As a computer file, this works out to roughly 3.5 MB per second. In terms of video quality, it is a step up from consumer analog formats, such as 8mm, VHS-C and Hi-8.
..... Click the link for more information. . preview not available. Click the link for more information.
Related Information
The Benefits of Digitization
|