Re: [gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-14 Thread Iain Buchanan
On Mon, 2007-08-13 at 11:29 +0100, Stroller wrote:
 I don't believe that's the case for video cameras, which usually use  
 firewire for video transfer.
 
 I have a customer who bought a DV camcorder with a USB socket  it  
 transpired that this socket was only capable of transferring photos  
 from the camera (which had both a video and a static photo mode).  
 Video had to be transferred by firewire.

seems a bit ... restrictive on the part of the manufacturer!

 Although videos appear in the mass storage device of my mum's digicam  
 in proper video recorders firewire is MUCH more common. If I wanted  
 to record video I would expect to be buying a firewire-capable video  
 camera; although I might well take Iain Buchanan's advice of 13th  
 August 2007 00:00:23 BST to supplant my previous  expectations, I  
 wouldn't expect USB is a serious camcorder.

yes and no, IMHO.  Firewire definitely _was_ the best way to get video,
off cheap or expensive video cameras, and therefore it will continue to
be used and provided for a long time.  BUT (!) I think the paradigm is
shifting to camera's with more intelligence - consider the purist such
as myself, who likes to get exactly what the camera recorded.

Firewire leaves the video stream open to a bit of interpretation - such
as what format to store the file in; exactly what frame to start /
finish on; how to encode the audio, etc.  This is all well and good, but
every time you capture the same minute of video, you may end up with a
slightly different output.

Directly downloading the video as a file however lets you get the exact
checksummable file that the camera decided to record.  You could do it
10 times and get the same result.  The camera can make a direct relation
from each pixel captured by it's CCD('s) to each pixel on each frame in
the video.  How it then compresses this video is up the the quality of
the camera, but at least I can be sure that I get the exact, in sync,
video and audio, at the correct aspect ration and resolution.

That's what I think anyway :)  It is of course my opinion to prefer USB
filesystem over firewire, and others may differ.  I do predict though,
that with the ease and speed of USB filesystem transfers vs firewire,
that any hard drive video camera from the cheapest to the expensive
amateur models will soon have (if not already) this option.

cya,
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Grubber: Ppbt!

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Re: [gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-13 Thread Stroller
I don't believe that's the case for video cameras, which usually use  
firewire for video transfer.


I have a customer who bought a DV camcorder with a USB socket  it  
transpired that this socket was only capable of transferring photos  
from the camera (which had both a video and a static photo mode).  
Video had to be transferred by firewire.


Although videos appear in the mass storage device of my mum's digicam  
in proper video recorders firewire is MUCH more common. If I wanted  
to record video I would expect to be buying a firewire-capable video  
camera; although I might well take Iain Buchanan's advice of 13th  
August 2007 00:00:23 BST to supplant my previous  expectations, I  
wouldn't expect USB is a serious camcorder.


Stroller.


On 12 Aug 2007, at 14:46, Paul wrote:

i have a sony digital camera that takes movies, and it just shows  
up as a usb drive.  i would assume that the video recorders would  
work the same way.  maybe you can take a laptop to a store that  
sells them and check to see if it works that way or find someone  
that has one and borrow it.  if you dont want sony recorders im  
sure you can find another brand with the same interface.


On 8/10/07, Don Jerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 8/10/07, James  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello to all,


I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the  sony  
SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly  for video transfer.  
Hopefully I can find a video  camera that transfers directly to a  
gentoo  sytem via usb 2.0? After my experience with a Sony  Viao  
Laptop, I'm not really keen on anything else  from sony (now that  
I think about it).

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Re: [gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-13 Thread Paul
i meant its main function is taking photos.  an added feature is it takes
movies, i wouldn't consider it a serious camera.  show us what you are
getting in dmesg when you plug in the camera.  and i think it is very stupid
that someone would make it so you could only transfer photos with usb.  if
it shows up as a hard drive you should have to do more or less exactly what
garry said.  if you can get a usb thumbdrive to mount on your computer, you
should be able to mount your camera in the same way.

On 8/13/07, Stroller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I don't believe that's the case for video cameras, which usually use
 firewire for video transfer.

 I have a customer who bought a DV camcorder with a USB socket  it
 transpired that this socket was only capable of transferring photos
 from the camera (which had both a video and a static photo mode).
 Video had to be transferred by firewire.

 Although videos appear in the mass storage device of my mum's digicam
 in proper video recorders firewire is MUCH more common. If I wanted
 to record video I would expect to be buying a firewire-capable video
 camera; although I might well take Iain Buchanan's advice of 13th
 August 2007 00:00:23 BST to supplant my previous  expectations, I
 wouldn't expect USB is a serious camcorder.

 Stroller.


 On 12 Aug 2007, at 14:46, Paul wrote:

  i have a sony digital camera that takes movies, and it just shows
  up as a usb drive.  i would assume that the video recorders would
  work the same way.  maybe you can take a laptop to a store that
  sells them and check to see if it works that way or find someone
  that has one and borrow it.  if you dont want sony recorders im
  sure you can find another brand with the same interface.
 
  On 8/10/07, Don Jerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 8/10/07, James
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Hello to all,
 
  I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the  sony
  SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly  for video transfer.
  Hopefully I can find a video  camera that transfers directly to a
  gentoo  sytem via usb 2.0? After my experience with a Sony  Viao
  Laptop, I'm not really keen on anything else  from sony (now that
  I think about it).
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Re: [gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-12 Thread Paul
i have a sony digital camera that takes movies, and it just shows up as a
usb drive.  i would assume that the video recorders would work the same
way.  maybe you can take a laptop to a store that sells them and check to
see if it works that way or find someone that has one and borrow it.  if you
dont want sony recorders im sure you can find another brand with the same
interface.

On 8/10/07, Don Jerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On 8/10/07, James [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hello to all,
 
  I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the
  sony SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly
  for video transfer. Hopefully I can find a video
  camera that transfers directly to a gentoo
  sytem via usb 2.0? After my experience with a Sony
  Viao Laptop, I'm not really keen on anything else
  from sony (now that I think about it).
 
  Another nice feature would be the ability to use
  the laptop screen for viewing  (while recording)
  instead of looking at that 2.7 in popout screen.
 
  A remote control (wireless or via the usb cable) from
  a gentoo linux system would be keen.
 
  Am I dreaming or has somebody seen a linux friendly
  video camera.  My target is to record video at
  football and basketball practice where my kids play.
 
 
  Or maybe somebody has interfaces a PTZ (pan tilt zoom)
  to a linux system and record in ntsc(pal) then later
  on convert to h.264 or such? I considering mounting
  the PTZ camera on a pole, so I can sit in the shade
  or a camper and record video, gentoo studio style...
  (beginning to sound like a project). Maybe use a logitech
  joystick to map all of the camera functions and use
  a laptop for recording (under the shade)
 

 Zoneminder leaps to mind, but it's more geared toward being the
 recording/viewing center for a separate camera.  PTZ cameras tend not
 to be camcorders too, but there are several ip-addressable ones (so
 one assumes you could wire up the camera to a wireless hub and take
 your laptop elsewhere).  See www-misc/zoneminder or the website at
 www.zoneminder.com.  Compatible cameras are listed in their wiki.
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Re: [gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-12 Thread Iain Buchanan

 On 8/10/07, Don Jerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 8/10/07, James [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hello to all,
 
  I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the
  sony SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly 
  for video transfer.

After playing around with video camera's for a few years, I have come to
the conclusion that the best way to go is the hard-drive based models,
such as the JVC everio series (their 3CCD model looks nice).

I've done lots of firewire video capture over the years, including a few
amateur wedding videos, and the biggest pain is capturing and storing
the footage.  With a HD model camera, you just plug it in like an
external hard drive (JVC works this way, I assume others would be the
same) and download the video files.  No need to worry about how to
encode, because it's all done for you, and at the exact aspect ratio and
quality that the camera recorded in.  Very fast!

A mini-DV camera takes 1 hour to download (capture) 1 hour of footage.
A mini DVD camera only stores about 1/2 per DVD.  A HD camera can store
10+ hours, and take only 10 minutes to download it!

  Hopefully I can find a video
  camera that transfers directly to a gentoo
  sytem via usb 2.0?

HD would definitely be the way then.

  Another nice feature would be the ability to use
  the laptop screen for viewing  (while recording)
  instead of looking at that 2.7 in popout screen. 

you can do this with kino and firewire.  Works fairly well actually, you
can even get the audio if you want to use headphones (or laptop
speakers).

  A remote control (wireless or via the usb cable) from
  a gentoo linux system would be keen.

again, kino and firewire will let you pause, record, ff, etc., but not
pan and zoom.

  Am I dreaming or has somebody seen a linux friendly
  video camera.  My target is to record video at 
  football and basketball practice where my kids play.

Hope this helps - not exactly a complete remote control option, but
maybe it will do?

cya,
-- 
Iain Buchanan iaindb at netspace dot net dot au

If you push the extra ice button on the soft drink vending machine, you won't
get any ice.  If you push the no ice button, you'll get ice, but no cup.

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[gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-10 Thread James
Hello to all,

I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the
sony SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly 
for video transfer. Hopefully I can find a video
camera that transfers directly to a gentoo
sytem via usb 2.0? After my experience with a Sony
Viao Laptop, I'm not really keen on anything else
from sony (now that I think about it).

Another nice feature would be the ability to use
the laptop screen for viewing  (while recording)
instead of looking at that 2.7 in popout screen.

A remote control (wireless or via the usb cable) from 
a gentoo linux system would be keen.

Am I dreaming or has somebody seen a linux friendly
video camera.  My target is to record video at 
football and basketball practice where my kids play.


Or maybe somebody has interfaces a PTZ (pan tilt zoom)
to a linux system and record in ntsc(pal) then later
on convert to h.264 or such? I considering mounting
the PTZ camera on a pole, so I can sit in the shade
or a camper and record video, gentoo studio style...
(beginning to sound like a project). Maybe use a logitech
joystick to map all of the camera functions and use
a laptop for recording (under the shade)


ideas?

James

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Re: [gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-10 Thread Don Jerman
On 8/10/07, James [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hello to all,

 I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the
 sony SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly
 for video transfer. Hopefully I can find a video
 camera that transfers directly to a gentoo
 sytem via usb 2.0? After my experience with a Sony
 Viao Laptop, I'm not really keen on anything else
 from sony (now that I think about it).

 Another nice feature would be the ability to use
 the laptop screen for viewing  (while recording)
 instead of looking at that 2.7 in popout screen.

 A remote control (wireless or via the usb cable) from
 a gentoo linux system would be keen.

 Am I dreaming or has somebody seen a linux friendly
 video camera.  My target is to record video at
 football and basketball practice where my kids play.


 Or maybe somebody has interfaces a PTZ (pan tilt zoom)
 to a linux system and record in ntsc(pal) then later
 on convert to h.264 or such? I considering mounting
 the PTZ camera on a pole, so I can sit in the shade
 or a camper and record video, gentoo studio style...
 (beginning to sound like a project). Maybe use a logitech
 joystick to map all of the camera functions and use
 a laptop for recording (under the shade)


Zoneminder leaps to mind, but it's more geared toward being the
recording/viewing center for a separate camera.  PTZ cameras tend not
to be camcorders too, but there are several ip-addressable ones (so
one assumes you could wire up the camera to a wireless hub and take
your laptop elsewhere).  See www-misc/zoneminder or the website at
www.zoneminder.com.  Compatible cameras are listed in their wiki.
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Re: [gentoo-user] OT :video cameras and gentoo

2007-08-10 Thread Joseph
I think with Linux you will be limited to FireWire port only; correct me
anybody if I'm wrong.

-- 
#Joseph

On Fri, 2007-08-10 at 17:39 +, James wrote:
 Hello to all,
 
 I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the
 sony SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly 
 for video transfer. Hopefully I can find a video
 camera that transfers directly to a gentoo
 sytem via usb 2.0? After my experience with a Sony
 Viao Laptop, I'm not really keen on anything else
 from sony (now that I think about it).
 
 Another nice feature would be the ability to use
 the laptop screen for viewing  (while recording)
 instead of looking at that 2.7 in popout screen.
 
 A remote control (wireless or via the usb cable) from 
 a gentoo linux system would be keen.
 
 Am I dreaming or has somebody seen a linux friendly
 video camera.  My target is to record video at 
 football and basketball practice where my kids play.
 
 
 Or maybe somebody has interfaces a PTZ (pan tilt zoom)
 to a linux system and record in ntsc(pal) then later
 on convert to h.264 or such? I considering mounting
 the PTZ camera on a pole, so I can sit in the shade
 or a camper and record video, gentoo studio style...
 (beginning to sound like a project). Maybe use a logitech
 joystick to map all of the camera functions and use
 a laptop for recording (under the shade)
 
 
 ideas?
 
 James
 

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