I'm sorry for PC-VCR Remote fans ....
but for now I think the only choice if
you have to capture "long" videos is AV-IO.
PC-VCR has a pretty face but simply it isn't enough. I wonder why such a company as Matrox has not been able to do the work Marcus Zingg has done.
I use RR mainly to put on VideoCD music and shows captured on TV. A capture set usually spans 3 or 4 files 2GB each and suffers only for 4-5 dropped frames (usually at the start of the first capture).
By the way, the price of AV-IO is nothing compared to what we spend in tricky upgrades and so on.
Then, call me a partisan.
Brambus
My hardware is the following:
Matrox G-200 SD (4.33 Powerdesk)
Rainbow Runner G (1.21 Videotools)
SB Live! (2.1 drivers)
Pentium III 500 (bus at 112 Mhz)
Asus P2B-F (latest bios)
Capture Disk is an IDE IBM 13Gb (~5Mb/sec on benchmark).
And a lot of patience.
but for now I think the only choice if
you have to capture "long" videos is AV-IO.
PC-VCR has a pretty face but simply it isn't enough. I wonder why such a company as Matrox has not been able to do the work Marcus Zingg has done.
I use RR mainly to put on VideoCD music and shows captured on TV. A capture set usually spans 3 or 4 files 2GB each and suffers only for 4-5 dropped frames (usually at the start of the first capture).
By the way, the price of AV-IO is nothing compared to what we spend in tricky upgrades and so on.
Then, call me a partisan.
Brambus
My hardware is the following:
Matrox G-200 SD (4.33 Powerdesk)
Rainbow Runner G (1.21 Videotools)
SB Live! (2.1 drivers)
Pentium III 500 (bus at 112 Mhz)
Asus P2B-F (latest bios)
Capture Disk is an IDE IBM 13Gb (~5Mb/sec on benchmark).
And a lot of patience.

Comment