Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I need help! I want a small pocket camcorder but I'm not sure which one to get. I don't want to fall into the hype of the Flip because I worry two hours won't be enough. What should I be looking for when considering a small camcorder and where can I get a good quality one with expandable memory? Thanks!"
I'm surprised with all this VoD stories on engadgetHD that no one has brought up Time Warner's recent idea of charging per the GB after you go over a limit.
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/jun2008/tc2008063_767960.htm?chan=technology_technology+index+page_top+stories
A Bandwidth Bandwagon?
Users may exceed limits even with Time Warner Cable's most expensive offering, $54.90 for 15 megabytes of data transfer and a 40GB cap, Brodsky reckons. "An HD movie is 8GB or so, three movies is more than half your allowance for a month, and heaven knows what else you might want to watch," Brodsky says. "This is not a relieving congestion scheme as much as it is a rationing scheme. All it does is protect an inadequate infrastructure from the cable company."
Time Warner set the tiers believing that the vast majority of users who pay $49.95 for the company's Roadrunner high-speed service would not see an impact, since their data usage already falls within the 20GB-per-month limit, Dudley says. As the network is upgraded to handle more capacity, it would adjust the caps to reflect users' changing Internet habits, he adds. So if, say, HD movie downloads became commonplace, the plan targeting the average user would have a much higher monthly GB limit.