Answer Best answer as chosen by user RahulA12 "Film making" denotes
use of a film camera. Panavision and Arris make them... there are several others. Yes, they are in use extensively; No, they have no audio recording capability - that is a separate system; and Yes, the "film" is sent out for processing then scanned, frame-by-frame for digital editing.
Generally speaking, it depends on the budget. Digital camcorders from Red or Silicon Imaging capture to hard disc drive - but assumes the project will not record in high altitude or high vibration environments. When these or other hard disc drive or flash memory camcorders are used, the video is quickly moved to RAID1 (multi-drive - redundant) storage systems. It should be noted that these cameras - and those like the Panasonic AG-HVX200 (DVCPRO HD), Sony XDCAM, Sony HDCAM, Canon XF (EXF) and JVC-GY (h.264) series cams all use low compression video file formats. As well, the external storage devices from Sony and FireStore can save low compression HDV format video typical of miniDV tape based camcorders.
The Sony HVR series and Canon XLH and XH series save to miniDV tape and low compression DV/HDV format. Since digital tape is inexpensive, it continues to be a preferred capture and archive mechanism.
High compression AVCHD is not used professionally.
The storage media is not as relevant as the video file format stored on that media. Low compression is best and can be stored on miniDV tape, flash memory or hard disc drive - depending on the camcorder's capabilities.
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