Pros: A relatively inexpensive standalone video recorder that instantly creates iPod-compatible 320×240 video files from an attached video device. Includes scheduled recording functionality, a 24-button Infrared remote control, video cables and a power supply.
Cons: Users must supply their own flash cards (Compact Flash or Memory Stick) for recordings, plus a device to transfer the cards’ contents to their computers and iTunes. Videos aren’t up to iTunes Music Store levels of quality, especially when viewed on a computer. Recording requires video device to be turned on to the correct channel; no TV tuner is included. High-resolution (640×480) videos require conversion to iPod-ready format.
Video recording has come a long way since the VCR – now that there’s TiVo (and numerous competing PC and Mac capture solutions), would you want to go back to a VCR-like solution? If the answer is yes, or you’re operating on a limited budget, the Neuros MPEG-4 Recorder 2 ($150) could be a good solution to your iPod video recording needs.
Video recording has come a long way since the VCR – now that there’s TiVo (and numerous competing PC and Mac capture solutions), would you want to go back to a VCR-like solution? If the answer is yes, or you’re operating on a limited budget, the Neuros MPEG-4 Recorder 2 ($150) could be an acceptable solution to your iPod video recording needs. Those looking for superior quality recording and more sophisticated menuing functionality will have to pay for it, but they may also find the extra expense to be worthwhile. On June 23, 2006, we added a rating to this previously unrated product, as we’ve now had the chance to sample several alternatives and properly set standards for what we expect from iPod-ready video recorders.
Neuros’s small glossy black and silver box is connected to any video source with composite (RCA-style) output plugs, and then to your television set via another set of composite plugs. A power supply and both of these cables are included in the box.
If you’re recording from a TV with a single tuner and set of outputs, this means that you’ll plug the Recorder 2 into the same device twice, once for input, and once for output – a bit tricky if you want a live preview of what you’re recording. As there are no buttons on the recorder itself, an included, adequate 24-button Infrared remote control provides all of your access to the device’s recording features, as well as a number of other features that iPod owners won’t use. The remote will bring up an on-screen menu system that’s highly reminiscent of the ones on VCRs – not smooth and TiVo-like, but functional – to manually set recording timers – multiple ones, if you want – with automatic follow-ups on the schedule (say, weekly) you prefer.
On a positive note, the Recorder 2 works. Set up a 320×240 recording, make sure your TV or other device is turned on (!) and playing back, and the device will churn out an iPod-ready MPEG-4 video file that will also play in iTunes. You can choose between various levels of quality, and also higher resolutions – up to 640×480 – if you prefer. The 640×480 files won’t play on the iPod, but they will play back and convert to iPod mode with iTunes; we successfully tested both playback and conversion with iTunes. On the iPod’s screen, the 320×240 videos look very similar to the ones Apple’s selling, enough in fact that most people won’t care about the differences, other than the logos and other interruptions (read: commercials) networks add to the broadcast videos.
That’s not to say that the files are identical.
They’re not. The first picture above is a still image from a Neuros-recorded video of the TV show The Office, the one below from an iTunes Music Store video. Neuros’s videos were noticeably grainier and less vibrant in color than videos purchased through the iTunes Music Store, and while the graininess could be mitigated by using higher quality recording standards and then converting the videos, the color couldn’t be. Conversion is a process we really prefer not to go through if we can avoid it – it adds inconvenience and additional time (roughly 45 minutes, give or take, for a 30 minute video) to the process. Additionally, Neuros 320- and 640-pixel files preserve the black bars (letterboxing) you’ll see on non-widescreen TVs when viewing widescreen-formatted TV shows, while Apple’s files do not. (A 368×208 widescreen recording mode is available, but not automatic.) This will matter more if Apple releases a widescreen-ready iPod, which may not deal as well with non-widescreen format videos.
There’s another VCR-like element to the Recorder 2, and one that will complicate the transfer-to-iPod process quite a bit for some people: you must own and insert either a CompactFlash card or a Memory Stick Pro card in order to save your recordings. The recorder has no internal storage capability, or cabled method to transfer files directly from the recorder to your computer. This means that you’ll need to have a memory card of some sort with a hundred or hundreds of Megabytes of free space if you’re planning to record television in 30-minute chunks.