Paul- both are true digital. Like I said don\'t worry about quality between formats when you\'re comparing sub $1.5k cameras, only worry about the CCD pixel count and lens quality.
I have a JVC MiniDV but my friend has a Sony Dig8. His Sony has a better CCD than mine and the overall image is better than my JVC. Then again my cam was $650 and his was $1k.
I "prefer" MiniDV because:
- it was developed from the ground up as a digital format, using new cassettes and didn\'t worry about backwards compatibility
- It is generally more compact and lighter for those long productions without the use of a tripod
- Dig8 was developed by Sony and unless it\'s TVs or videogames, I tend to stay away from their products
As for your Widescreen woes if you don\'t have a WS TV then why are you concerned? You need a pretty expensive anamorphic lens and/or 16:9 CCDs to capture a true anamorphic widescreen image. If your camera was under $1500 then I\'d bet yours crops the image with black bars or does some other trick for a quasi-letterbox mode.
Here\'s a true 16:9 MiniDV camera. It retails over $8k, and it\'s the cheapest 16:9 camera JVC offers.
So to sum up:
1) Digital 8 is a VERY digital format, the info is stored in 1\'s and 0\'s with no Digital-to-Analog Conversions. It uses backward compatibility with older tapes to appease the common consumer
2) Your camera is a 4:3 camera with fake 16:9 modes (just like 99% of consumer cameras out there)
3) Camera under $2k? I\'m better it\'s interlaced.
4) Considering I\'m poor as *@$)@ I have way too much time on my hands to be knowing this stuff.