Transfer Videos to a Hard Drive
No matter what kind of memory your camcorder records to, it’s a good idea to transfer that video to your computer hard drive. Typically, the easiest way to transfer video from a camcorder to a computer is to connect them via a USB cable and use the software that came with your camcorder to perform the transfer. Putting your video onto your computer will allow you to perform any edits and enable you to transfer the video to another storage format.
Create Backup Copies of Your Videos
Your computer should not be the final resting place for your video files; you should create backups and store them elsewhere. There are a few good options.
Burn a DVD
DVDs are inexpensive and widely available. Many camcorder manufacturers sell standalone DVD burners, which connect directly to camcorders and save footage to a disk without using a computer. However, you don’t need to purchase a standalone burner if you already have a DVD burner on your computer. The software that shipped with your camcorder should include a function for disk burning via PC.
Save to an External Hard Drive
External hard drives are more expensive than blank DVDs, but they can store hundreds of hours of video footage. To transfer data to an external hard drive, connect it to your computer via USB, then drag-and-drop the files from your PC to the drive. Buy the highest capacity hard drive you can afford. It is far better to have too much storage than too little. No matter how large a drive you buy, you’ll eventually fill it, especially if you own an HD camcorder.
Use Cloud Storage
Many cloud storage services allow you to upload files to a remote server for safekeeping. Most of these services charge a fee for storing large amounts of data, and you might be concerned about sharing your personal videos with a third party. Nonetheless, keeping videos in the cloud will preserve them even if your house burns down.
Keep Track of Formats
Fewer computers are being sold with DVD drives, so it’s only a matter of time before the format goes extinct. Keep up with camcorder memory formats as they evolve and migrate your videos as your formats become obsolete. This will likely entail bringing those videos back onto your computer and exporting them onto the storage media of the future.
Keep Track of Codecs
Camcorder video codecs are constantly evolving. Think of codec formats as the language of digital video. When you view your video on a computer or TV, a translator works on those devices to translate these codecs into the video you see. If a device doesn’t support the appropriate codec, then it cannot playback the video. As with storage formats, modern digital video formats like AVCHD, H.264, and MPEG-2 will one day be obsolete, so consider the codecs supported by any new software or device you plan to purchase.