Share your experience!
Anybody have any ideas?
The only route I have discovered so far has been to import video clips into imovie and then import the saved files into iphoto. Anybody come across a simpler or more direct method?
Message was edited by: jral21
Message was edited by: jral21
Solved! Go to Solution.
I've recently acquired an Eye-fi card. While the card isn't perfect, it wirelessly (via a router or without router) transfers photos directly to iPhoto and videos are transfered to a folder.
For video, I couldn't decide if I should ditch AVCHD (good for bluray) for MP4 (lower quality, but good for Macs). As I've been using AVCHD for several years, I decided to stick with AVCHD, and use Handbrake to encode the AVCHD clips to MP4. The conversion process usually runs at 30-50fps on my MacBook Air. I use http://www.osomac.com/apps/osx/handbrake-batch/ to encode lots of clips at a time.
Once in MP4, I can either import into iPhoto, or iMovie if I wish to make a film then upload to YouTube and iTunes for my iPad.
When my Eye-Fi card gets full (it's a 8GB one), I stick it in my PC and archive the photo & video contents.
Hello jral21 - welcome to the Sony Forums
Although I am not a Mac user myself, I do hear about various issues when trying to connect camcorders to a Mac computer and unless iPhoto offers a specific 'import' facility that functions correctly with your HX9V - the method that you have described may well be the best (and only) option.
Having said that, if someone else sees this thread with a little more Mac experience, they may have another suggestion for you.
Thanks,
Simon
I also have a Mac and would really like to find a better solution too. It should have been possible to set the camera to save in another format than dts.
I've recently acquired an Eye-fi card. While the card isn't perfect, it wirelessly (via a router or without router) transfers photos directly to iPhoto and videos are transfered to a folder.
For video, I couldn't decide if I should ditch AVCHD (good for bluray) for MP4 (lower quality, but good for Macs). As I've been using AVCHD for several years, I decided to stick with AVCHD, and use Handbrake to encode the AVCHD clips to MP4. The conversion process usually runs at 30-50fps on my MacBook Air. I use http://www.osomac.com/apps/osx/handbrake-batch/ to encode lots of clips at a time.
Once in MP4, I can either import into iPhoto, or iMovie if I wish to make a film then upload to YouTube and iTunes for my iPad.
When my Eye-Fi card gets full (it's a 8GB one), I stick it in my PC and archive the photo & video contents.