While on vacation in Vancouver, British Columbia, I received a famous brand camera that used tape cartridges. I took a lot of this away from filming Chinatown, a 360-degree rotating view of the Eagle Tower restaurant. Later, when I went to school, there were many more. It was a good camera but it cost 1599.95 without cartridges. I shudder to think how much that is in today's dollars. For an unadjusted $80 today, this camera is better. Great picture, selfie remote, two batteries and all the basic accessories. The only thing missing was a memory card. Although it has an interesting device that looks like a USB stick, it can accept several different memory cards in order to transfer them to a computer or other device. Another advantage over this dinosaur is that I don't need a special player to see the results. In most cases I just connected the video cables from the camera to the TV inputs. New technologies are cheaper and usually better. I drove another camera around Vancouver in a large bag with straps and extra batteries. I could put this in my pocket and the batteries and remote control in another pocket. As a dedicated camcorder, it should outperform all but the more expensive phones in playback and sound quality. highlighted.
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