Customer Rating: 




Summary: Nearly as Simple to Use as the Macintosh Playing Its Movies Now
Comment: This is my very first camcorder. (Okay. I know: I'm culturally deprived.)
Right of the box, it's amazingly simple to use, and for $250, my new Samsung SC-HMX10C (8GB flash drive) was simply irresistible when I bought it twenty minutes ago at Big Lots, just down the street, where the dozen allocated to that store evaporated in a matter of minutes.
After plugging in its external power supply, I quickly and easily shot a few snippets of video and a photo or few, then connected its USB cable to my old, slow (pre-Intel) Macintosh mini, whereupon a Samsung external drive icon popped onto my desktop. I dragged four videos and a handful of photos from the folders in the Samsung drive into a folder on my Macintosh. When I double-clicked a video, Apple's Quicktime sprang to life, displayed the standard H.264 (MPEG-4.AVC) video from the camcorder perfectly (without any of the On-Screen Information that another reviewer misled me to fear would show up in the recorded video).
The SC-HMX10's right-out-of-the-box simplicity is my focus here, because all that I've done is to pull it from its box, plug in its external power supply, switch it on, flip open its huge LCD screen, point it at my wary but curious cats, and press the big red button next to my thumb. When the cats stopped playing games, I simply wanted to see how quick and easy it would be to examine and edit the photos and movies on my Macintosh.
Quick and easy were the words that fit so well.
Twenty minutes out of the box, and everything's looking good so far.
Then I tried two more ways to examine or edit the camcorder's movies on my Macintosh:
1) I opened my old, original version of iMovie on my Macintosh, and dragged one of the video snippets onto its movie clip editing pallette; iMovie played it perfectly, without a hint of a hiccup, on the spot.
2) I plugged the camcorder's S-Video Out cable to the input to my Macintosh's EyeTV Tuner-Recorder, which records an MPEG-2 (DVD grade) video of the camcorder's LCD screen output, while I rummaged among the Samsung camcorder's LCD touch-screen menus and replayed on the camera the video snippets and photographs stashed in its internal flash drive. I like that the camcorder continues to display everything on its own LCD all the while it is transmitting that imagery on its video-out connection to a television or any other player/recording device.
Let me see now. I think there's a User's Guide and a CD in here somewhere . . .
I'll wander back to share some more meaningful impressions, after I've explored the full range of features (and possible problems or peculiar limitations) of this seemingly wonderful video camera.
Stay tuned.