View Full Version : Looking for a stable solution


Ib Hansen
January 26th, 2009, 06:12 AM
I work at a school, where we have long interviews with parents, that has to be recorded for our therapists use
The therapists has absolutely no knowledge about video recording and/or software applications. And they have no interest in learning about it. I do understand that
What they need is, one button to press for record, and then a remote to ff through the interview to analyze it
There will be some editing. Mostly just to avoid the huge amount of storage

My idea is, to get a surveillance camera. No need for high resolution, and I guess its more stable then some Sony handycam (there is no surveillance
Then a device, that is only able to store and edit video. Absolutely not a Windows machine of any sort. Stability is the keyword again
Then a screen… Therapists do know how to control that kind of thing ;-)

If you think the simple idea about a surveillance camera and a recording device of some sort would work ok, then i would like help to guide me to some good devices. If you think of some other kind of setup, then im very open for inputs

Regards

Gary Nattrass
January 26th, 2009, 06:18 AM
You could buy a macbook pro and an external firewire drive. The in-built i-sight camera could be used and it keeps it really simple. You can record direct into i-movie and then edit it there.
A USB external camera could improve the set-up and still record straight to the laptop.

Hope this helps.

Harold Schreiber
January 26th, 2009, 12:09 PM
Hi Ib Hansen,

You don't mention how "long" those long interviews are, nor how much of - and how long - you need to store the video. Also, what are they likely to be watching the video on ?

I'd bet a DVR / HDD Recorder, and a simple Camcorder would do it. The Cam would be pluged into the DVR Recorder via FireWire, no need to use the Cam itself as a recorder unit. You can do the simple editing necessary on the HDD of the DVR Recorder, and then put the video's out to DVD's for long term storage and ease of use. Also, you can make as many DVD copies as necessary.

The DVD's could then been viewed on any Computer, or DVD player - through any TV.

You can put from 1 to 6 hrs of video to a DVD, at lesser quality for the longer time's - but good enough for your purpose.

I think this would be as simple as you could get, for what you want to do.

Harold

Ib Hansen
January 27th, 2009, 03:50 AM
@Garry
I havent thought of a Mac. It would be a good unit to combine the screen and recording device, but i would need a better camera for sure

@Harold
The "long" interview could be up to 4 hours. Thats why storrage could be a problem. I cant think of any other idea then DVD, so the resolution has to be so low (or compresion so good), that a 4 hour interview can be under 4 GB. Thats math i can do, so no need for help there
Do yoy have an idea for a good HDD recorder with the abbility to edit the material and very userfriendly ?