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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5200
"Audio Format Not Supported"
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<blockquote data-quote="Fred Kingston_RIP" data-source="post: 150748" data-attributes="member: 10742"><p>If it's any consolation... Canon uses the same MOV format for their cameras... and Panasonic/Leica uses an MTS format, which almost certainly your DVD player won't even see... </p><p></p><p>Camera folks choose highly compressible standards because video files are big...and folks would cry if their cameras could only hold/record 2 minutes of video... </p><p></p><p>DVD Player makers aren't concerned with size... but they are concerned with paying no license fees to use different codecs...</p><p></p><p>Most all video software allows you to edit/export/output their contents in common DVD formats for playback machines... </p><p></p><p>Think, DVD players as being the low-man weak-link in the video chain...</p><p></p><p>The camera maker creates a product a professional can use... The DVD player maker makes a product a 12 year old can buy in Walmart...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fred Kingston_RIP, post: 150748, member: 10742"] If it's any consolation... Canon uses the same MOV format for their cameras... and Panasonic/Leica uses an MTS format, which almost certainly your DVD player won't even see... Camera folks choose highly compressible standards because video files are big...and folks would cry if their cameras could only hold/record 2 minutes of video... DVD Player makers aren't concerned with size... but they are concerned with paying no license fees to use different codecs... Most all video software allows you to edit/export/output their contents in common DVD formats for playback machines... Think, DVD players as being the low-man weak-link in the video chain... The camera maker creates a product a professional can use... The DVD player maker makes a product a 12 year old can buy in Walmart... [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5200
"Audio Format Not Supported"
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