If you meant 'move' the files... You SHOULD be able to connect the camera to your computer - and have windows treat it as 'an external storage device.'
If you click on 'my computer' it should show the camera as a drive (F: for example) and the SD card as drive (G: for example) Assuming it does, simply open the HDD in one window, and the SD card in another - then simply drag & drop from one to the other.
you can use lots of video editing softwares out there, it doesn't matter what type of camera you have or software you use, i prefer: pinnacle, movie maker, or video wave. If you have a win xp, movie maker should already be on there.
The camera files use a different file name extension (format) than Windows Movie Maker does. In other words, the camera's files are not compatible with the program. You can either download the K-Lite Standard Codec Package (Google it). Perhaps the codec package contains the one you need to read the camera file. If that doesn't work, download a free video converter from online and convert the camera file to one compatible with Windows Movie Maker.
No, unless you buy a flashcart, "Acekardi", download Moonshell, turn your movie files into .DPG files, and put them on your Micro SD. but apart from that, no.
A digital camera does not put Any "Device" into a computer. A digital camera acts as a storage device and an output device, it transfers jpeg and other similar files to computers as well as mp4 and other movie files.
No. The movie camera used film to document events and they were shown on a projector.
In Windows Movie Maker 2.1, in the left side pane click "Import Pictures" in the Category "Capture Video" in Movie Tasks. (Movie Maker 2.1 is in Windows XP & Vista) In Windows Live Movie Maker, Import Files is located on the Home tab. Click it and select the files.
Pretty well any burning software will burn the DVD files onto a DVD-R. The problem is getting the DVD files in the first place.If you have compressed files (avi, wmv) andyour DVD player can play this type of file, all you need is the burning software. But if you want to copy a movie from a commercial DVD, then a) that is illegal and not something I want to talk about on this site, and b) you can't just do a file copy operation, because the files are all copy-protected.If you have a movie that you made on a video camera, then you should be able to copy the files to a DVD. The camera should have instructions on how the files are stored, and how to copy them to a DVD.
Try making a movie without a movie camera. It's really difficult.
The cast of Woman with a Movie Camera - 2013 includes: Jk Russ as Woman with a Movie Camera
The duration of Man with a Movie Camera is 1.13 hours.
http://www.applemacvideo.com/articles/how-to-make-a-home-movie-using-imovie.html
Man with a Movie Camera was created on 1929-01-08.