P2 (P2 is a short form for "Professional Plug-In") is a professional
digital recording solid-state memory storage media format introduced by
Panasonic in 2004, and especially tailored to
electronic news-gathering (ENG) applications. It features tapeless (non-linear) recording of
DV,
DVCPRO, DVCPRO25, DVCPRO50, DVCPRO-HD, or
AVC-Intra streams on a
solid-state flash memory. The P2 card is essentially a
RAID of
Secure Digital (SD) memory cards with an
LSI controller tightly packaged in a
die-cast PC Card (formerly PCMCIA) enclosure, so data transfer rate increases as memory capacity increases. The system includes cameras, decks as drop-in replacements for
Videocassette recorders (VCR), and a special 5.25-inch computer drive for
random-access integration with
non-linear editing systems (NLE). The cards can also be used directly where a
PC card (PCMCIA) slot is available, as in most older
notebook computers, as a normal
hard disk drive, although a custom software driver must first be loaded.
As of early 2010, P2 cards are available in capacities of 4, 8, 16, 32 and 64 GB. At introduction, P2 cards offered low recording capacity compared to competing,
video tape-based formats (a
miniDV tape holds roughly 13 GB of data, and an S-size
HDCAM tape holds 50 GB). To solve this, camcorders and decks using P2 media employ multiple card slots, with the ability to span the recording over all slots. Cards are recorded in sequence, and when a card is full,...
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