Hello Collin,

If you get a camera that will do mpeg4 encoding, you can usually get
about 40 minutes of video on a 1gb card.  That would be at 640X480 and
30 fps.  Shooting at 15 fps can be quite jerky looking.

So my recommendation would be to look for those specs.  There a
several cameras out there that can do that, including the Pentax Optio
MX's and at least the newer A10.  Some other cameras are encoding to
mpeg2 and I think you get about half as much video time out of them
for the same megabytes.

I would just go look on www.dpreview.com and read the specs of a bunch
of cameras and look for those capabilities.  I'm sure there will be a
bunch of choices that would suit your needs.

-- 
Best regards,
Bruce


Tuesday, September 5, 2006, 5:00:22 PM, you wrote:


 >>What you didn't specify was the video image size and the frame rate.
 >>Nor did you indicate the size of storage card you would use for the 20
 >>minutes.  Is audio quality an issue?  Do you want to be able to zoom
 >>while videoing?  What about anti-shake?
 >>
 >>Having delved into the P&S video aspect a bit, those questions need
CRB> to be answered.
 >>
 >>--
 >>Best regards,
 >>Bruce

CRB> Thanks for the additional thoughts.  I'd not considered them.
CRB> I really don't know what size of card would be required for 20+ 
CRB> minutes of video.
CRB> I'm assuming a 1 or 2 gig would be adequate, but someone can correct
CRB> me on that.
CRB> Frame rate would need to be 15 or so.
CRB> Audio quality is not an issue.  This is for practice rather than 
presentation.
CRB> It will be stationary so zoom while shooting is not critical.



CRB> Sincerely,

CRB> Collin Brendemuehl
CRB> http://www.brendemuehl.net
CRB> http://evangelicalperspective.blogspot.com

CRB> "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose"
CRB>                                                  -- Jim Elliott





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