Hi Greg,
The Ki Pro workflow is pretty simple. These units record on a regular firewire 800 hard drive that is inserted in the recorder. The drives hold either 250 GB or 500 GB, so one important thing is to make sure you have enough hard drive space to record your entire event. You can switch hard drives if one gets full but it’s not a super speedy process. By the way, the Ki Pro typically wants to stop recording when the drive capacity is down to 10% … this can be a surprise if you’re not prepared for it.
Please read the manual to double check my information, but here’s the workflow when you’re done recording:
1. Press the “Slot” button on the Ki Pro and wait until it says “No Slot” … It is unmounting the drive while you’re waiting. If the Ki Pro has already been powered down you do not need to do this step.
2. Press the “Eject” button on the Ki Pro. This is the physical release for the drive.
3. Slide the drive out of its bay by pulling towards you (towards the keypad, not upwards)
4. You’ll notice that the back of the drive has a single FW 800 port. Simply connect it to your computer by FW800 and transfer your files. Since the files are ProRes QuickTimes, they do not need to be re-wrapped or converted before use in Final Cut. There is not a complicated directory structure like there is for SxS cards, it’s simply one file equals one clip.
Do not underestimate the time it will take to transfer these files!
Have fun!
—
John Street
http://www.inpoint.tv
Mac OS 10.6.6, FCS 7.0.3, QT 7.6.6, Mac Pro 2x3GHz Quad-Core, 16GB Ram