MOD video can be viewed on a computer with a player that is capable of reproducing MPEG-2 video. Renaming the file extension from video.MOD to video.MPEG might help software like VLC Media Player to recognize it as a valid format. This video can be easily authored for watching on a DVD player without recompression, because it is fully compliant with DVD-video standard.
JVC MOD camcorders2004: GZ-MC100 (SD), GZ-MC200 (SD)
2005: GZ-MG30 (HDD), GZ-MG70 (HDD)
2006: GZ-MG37 (HDD), GZ-MG77 (HDD), GZ-MG505 (HDD, SD/SDHC card)
2007: GZ-MG130 (HDD), GZ-MG155 (HDD), GZ-MG175 (HDD, SD/SDHC card), GZ-MG255 (HDD), GZ-MG555 (HDD, SD/SDHC card)
2008: GZ-MS100U (SD/SDHC card)
2008: GZ-MG7230 (30 GB HDD, MicroSD)
2009: GZ-MG630 (60 GB HDD, MicroSD), GZ-MG670 (80 GB HDD, MicroSD), GZ-MG680 (120 GB HDD, MicroSD)
However, I found many people want to know how to
import JVC Mod to iMovie as below.
Q1:
I have a JVC Everio GZ-MG750 which records in .mod format. Would this work with iMovie '09?I have a JVC Everio GZ-MG750 and it imports into my PC computer in .mod format. I want to upgrade my Mac so that I can edit the videos on iMovie. Would this work? I have to get the Leopard OS because I have the PowerPC chip, and I want to get iLife '09. Currently, I have the Tiger OS and iLife '05.
Q2:
I want to get .MOD movies from my JVC HDD cam to iMovie on Mac OsX. How?But iMovie does not support .MOD movies so I wanna ask if I buy MPEG-2 package from apple online store, will it work or I have to buy something like DropDV or other converting programs to get it on iMovie? thank you and sorry for my english, hope you understood