Macworld (USA)

LIFEFLIX 2.5: YOUR OLD MINIDV CAMCORDER’S NEW BEST FRIEND

- BY J.R. BOOKWALTER

If you shot home videos between 1995 and 2010, there’s a good chance you did so with a tape-based Minidv camcorder. With its simple Firewire connectivi­ty, the DV format had a great run prior to the advent of smartphone­s. For those who want to relive those taped memories, Lifeflix ( go.macworld.com/lflx) is a Mac applicatio­n that makes it simple to do.

ATTACH YOUR CAMCORDER AND IMPORT THE VIDEO

Lifeflix streamline­s the process of capturing tapes in three easy steps. First, dust off your Minidv, HDV, Hi-8, or Digital 8 camcorder and attach it to the Mac with a Firewire cable. This will be the biggest

stumbling block for many, since Apple abandoned Firewire in 2012. You can overcome this hurdle by investing in a Thunderbol­t to Firewire Adapter ( go. macworld.com/th2f; $29 at Apple); most users will also need a Firewire 400 to 800 Adapter ( go.macworld. com/elgf) sold by Elago ($10 on Amazon; go. macworld.com/amfw) that I used to connect my aging JVC SR-VS30 MINI-DV/S-VHS combo deck, as well as a Canon HV20 HDV camcorder.

With the hard part out of the way, stick a tape in the camcorder, launch Lifeflix, and click the

Import button. The software prompts you to enter a unique tape name and optional descriptio­n; after confirming, the tape convenient­ly rewinds to the beginning and starts capturing. You’ll see a preview of the video, but Lifeflix thoughtful­ly mutes incoming audio during capture—a nice feature, although I’d prefer an option to listen along, preferably with volume control. Although video editing software like imovie imports DV footage, such applicatio­ns aren’t well-suited to the task of quickly capturing and assembling bits and pieces from a tape. Lifeflix automatica­lly detects when the camcorder started or stopped,

splitting footage into separate scenes you can then save individual­ly or combine into new videos.

COMBINES VIDEO FILE, NOT EDIT

Lifeflix doesn’t edit video in the traditiona­l sense. Instead, you remove unwanted clips, then trim and combine the rest into one or more new videos. You can’t add titles, transition­s, or effects, which is perfectly fine—most of the time I just want to remove the bad stuff and assemble a stand-alone movie, and that’s exactly what Lifeflix excels at. (I hope the developers consider an IOS version. The App Store needs more video apps like this.)

By default, Lifeflix compresses incoming NTSC or PAL video using Youtubefri­endly H.264 at a fixed data rate of 3.3Mbps, but you can uncheck this option before each import and transcode full uncompress­ed video instead. (Both wrapped as Quicktime MOV files.) The difference in image quality is negligible, but the storage savings are huge.

An hour of MP4 video consumes only 1.3GB of disk space, versus 13GB uncompress­ed.

There are a few downsides: Importing with MP4 compressio­n hits the CPU pretty hard, occasional­ly locking up the app for a minute or two after stopping. The app tends to be sluggish at times and fails to properly refresh clip thumbnails. Youtube sharing is currently broken (although it appears to be working), and sharing to Photos still refers to the late, great iphoto.

BOTTOM LINE

Assuming you have a working camcorder and the right adapters, Lifeflix is the quickest and easiest way to get Minidv tapes into your Mac. ■

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 ??  ?? Lifeflix convenient­ly mutes the audio while capturing, but I’d like to have the option to listen along in a future update.
Lifeflix convenient­ly mutes the audio while capturing, but I’d like to have the option to listen along in a future update.
 ??  ?? Click Import, add a name and optional descriptio­n, and Lifeflix starts capturing tapes into the computer as either MP4 or uncompress­ed MOV files.
Click Import, add a name and optional descriptio­n, and Lifeflix starts capturing tapes into the computer as either MP4 or uncompress­ed MOV files.
 ??  ?? It’s a snap to trim the start and end of each clip, then save them individual­ly or as a new combined movie.
It’s a snap to trim the start and end of each clip, then save them individual­ly or as a new combined movie.

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