2020. 1. 31. 23:00ㆍ카테고리 없음
Here’s what I did to get my Sony HDR-SR1 to work with my Mac Pro. The first thing you need to do is to the Quicktime Pro. Go from Apple.
It costs $20 Download and install. Initially I thought just this file alone would work however it failed to capture the audio. So another step was needed. Go to Download this free software call STREAMCLIP.
It’s a conversion software so that you’ll be able to extract the audio and video. It’s pretty darn powerful. Okay.you’ve got all you need. Now heres what do with your camera. First you need to have some clue about how to manuever around the cam using it’s touch screen, so read the book. You need to make sure your camera is set to shoot STANDARD mode and not High Def.
Windows 10 Hdr Driver
You can’t import the HD stuff to Final Cut or IMovie yet because of the format. Again, make sure your Sony Cam is set to Standard mode. Shoot about 10 seconds of video.
Aug 16, 2017. High Definition “Handycam” Camcorder HDR-UX1/UX1E and HDR-SR1/. This symptom is caused by a problem with the software of the unit.
Play it back on the cam to make certain you did capture video and that you can hear the audio. WITH CAM OFF plug in the USB cable.
Then turn on the camera. You should see an icon on your camera screen flashing asking if you want to connect to your computer.
Your cam should now be talking to your mac. In a few seconds you should see a new drive bay icon called NO NAME pop up on your desktop.
Open that file and you’ll see several Directories. Open the directory called MPROOT then open the next directory 101PNV01. Open that and you’ll see your MPG file. That is the one you are looking for. That is your movie. That is your target.
Open up STREAMCLIP you downloaded and click FILE, Then OPEN FILES and then navigate to that MPG stored on your camera’s hard drive. Remember it’s under the NO NAME drive on your desktop Once you open it in STREAMCLIP then all you do is hit FILE, then Export it to DV, or Quicktime or AVI or MPG-4.
I converted mine to DV. Give your file and name and save it to your desktop You can now edit and manipulate the video in IMovie HD or Final Cut! Mac Pro Mac OS X (10.4.8) It's kick.
Let me add that if you want to edit in FCE the final export step from MPEG Streamclip should be Export to Quicktime (NOT Export to DV), and then you should make sure the following options are set: - Compression: Apple DV-DVCPRO/NTSC (or Apple DV-PAL) Quality: 100% (not sure it is neccessary, its default is 50%) The remaining default values should be ok; among them: - Audio, uncompressed - Stereo - Auto (48 KHz) - Image size: 720 x 480 (NTSC) or 720 x 576 (PAL) - Field Dominance: Lower Field First - Zoom: 100% - X/Y: 1 While if you want to edit in iMovie you can use Export to DV. Howdy, From what I can tell, IMovie (Version 6.0.3) and Final Cut Express (Version 3.5.1) can't currrently read the High Def format from this camera. However, convert it to Quicktime or DV and at least you'll be able to manipulate the standard format data. I'm a true rookie at this stuff, yesterday was the first day I ever shot film with this cam so believe me, I'm no expert! I spent 18 hours trying to find a solution to making this cam work with my Mac and I simply thought the information was worth sharing! Sounds like the first person to reply really knows their stuff and I'll be exporting my stuff to Quicktime rather than DV in the future. Hey.visit my website to find out about my new book!
Www.avdop.com (Absolutely nothing to do with computers, Macs or video) Chris Mac Pro Mac OS X (10.4.8) It's kick. Just upgraded to Quicktime Pro isn't cheap, downloaded MPEG Streamclip started to open mpg file from hard drive either way if I convert Mpeg or export to avi, dv, QT, popup window always warns me ' You must install the MPEG-2 Playback component before trying to export MPEG-2 files! You can buy it from Apple.'
I'm not prepared to spend another $20 bucks, so wot was the point of upgrading to QT pro in the first place, shouldn't I just purchase the QT MPEG-2 playback first instead of upgrading QT Pro, both cost 20 odd bucks! Now I'm stuck, any other ideas. MPEG-2 popup windows just bugs me! Apple Footer. This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficacy of any proposed solutions on the community forums.
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Sony Hdr Sr1 Drivers For Mac
The Good Hard disk holds about four hours of best-quality HD video; sharp, saturated, low-noise video; excellent build quality; fast, smooth focus with effective image stabilization. The Bad Mediocre still photos; frequent motion artifacts in video; lame but necessary bundled software; no windscreen filter for microphone. The Bottom Line The Sony Handycam HDR-SR1's combination of hard disk capacity, easy adapatability, great design, and a broad feature set make it the consumer HD model to beat for 2006. Visit for details.
Some playback and editing irritations remain. Though the disk mounts as a USB storage device when you attach the camcorder to your PC, you still need to install Sony's Picture and Motion Browser software, with its two appendages: a Media Check utility that intercepts calls to any camcorder or media that might have M2TS files on it, and a Sonic UDF driver, though the latter matters only for the DVD version. Plus, there's an AVCHD player that you'll need to view your videos. The software lets you trim clips, but that's about it. If you've a yen to burn a DVD, you can push a button on the camcorder or use the software; keep in mind that a playable DVD, at least for the near-term, means down-converting to MPEG-2 standard-def. However, as with the UX1, I found it a pleasure to use the HDR-SR1.
It's built as sturdily, if a hair smaller in two dimensions; and its 1-pound, 9-ounce heft balances nicely in the hand. The hard-disk enclosure projects a bit above the top of the unit for a solid grip. Given the abundance of space on the SR1, nothing feels crammed in, and with a couple of small exceptions, all the controls fall under the correct fingers for easy one-handed shooting. Those exceptions?
The proximity of the photo shutter button to the zoom switch, and the slight awkwardness of operating the on/off switch (for jumping between photo and camcorder modes) with an index finger. Like all Sony camcorders, the SR1 features a touch-screen-navigated menu system; I'm not a fan, but it works better on the SR1's large LCD than the smaller screens of lesser models.