General principles


The transfer of a video cassette recording to DVD basically involves the capture and digitisation of the analogue video, editing the digitised video as necessary and compressing this prior to burning it to DVD. There are various methods of accomplishing this, varying in ease of operation, speed, quality and cost.

A typical video capture card is a system of hardware and software which together allow a user to convert video into a computer-readable format by digitising video sequences to uncompressed or, more normally, compressed data files. Uncompressed video is an unwieldy beast, so some kind of compression has to be employed to make it more manageable. It's down to a codec to compress video during capture and decompress it again for playback, and this can be done in software or hardware. Even in the age of GHz-speed CPUs, a hardware codec is necessary to achieve anything near broadcast quality video.

The codec used for DVD is known as MPEG-2.

The codec used for DVD is known as MPEG-2.

Last Update: Fri Jun 10th 2005