Hitachi DZHS300A Camcorder
Hitachi DZHS300A Camcorder A Hybrid for Home Movies
June 2007 By Grant ClauserSure making the video is pretty easy to do—point the lens, press the red button—but the process of editing and getting the footage into a format I can play on my television still requires a bit of work. Look, we’re all busy. I know I can get nearly professional DVD results with pretty cheap software, but mostly I want to watch what I made within minutes of the time I made it without having to spend an hour or more editing, rendering, finalizing and burning.
So, I guess what I like most about Hitachi’s new DZHS300A camcorder is it makes the processes of shooting, editing and viewing very fast and simple. This is the first camcorder to include both a hard disc drive and a DVD drive. It also includes a slot for an SD card which can be used for recording still pictures.
So why include both a hard drive and DVD? The concept goes something like this—for standard video shooting you use the hard disc drive. It’s got more capacity (six hours in standard mode, 110 minutes in extra fine mode) than the DVD (or a miniDV tape) so you won’t need to worry so much about running out of room (you’ll have to worry a little though because the drive in this model is only 8GB). When it’s time to watch those videos or share them with other people, you dub them onto the mini DVD and watch them in your DVD player. No computer or dubbing cable required.
People who don’t want to learn a long set of instructions will find using the DZHS300A to be fairly simple. Most of the videos I made used the basic point and shoot method. Hitachi claims to have the fastest start-up time on the market, and indeed this model was ready for shooting within a second of switching it on. The 2.7-inch widescreen LCD display is bright enough to use outdoors. The LCD can also be reversed and used as a light, but then you’re forced to use the optical viewfinder, which is something most home users aren’t fond of.

