Basically the PVR350 is just that: a PVR, intended to be used in
hardware recorders and things like that (and I know it is in fact used
in some HW recorders). It's not for mpeg4 playback, etc. Although you
can use a software decoder and XV to do the playback. The XV stuff is
pretty efficient
Not sure if that's a recent 'break', but the pvr350
*can* ff/rw (like a vcr), but good support for that
hasn't been written into mythtv yet.
Mine does a 3x ff, and that's about it, but it IS
still ff'ding
And for the record, i think that the pvr cards are
really only useful when you have an old
On Fri, 9 Feb 2007, kevin thayer wrote:
And for the record, i think that the pvr cards are
really only useful when you have an old box lying
around and you want to make it a pvr. If you have even
a moderately fast box, why not buy a $30 capture card
and let it decode/encode in software?
On Wed, Feb 07, 2007 at 03:02:12PM -0500, Jeff Simpson wrote:
However, the PVR350 allows you to use rather moderate hardware for a
front- and backend (i.e.: my old P3 850 as combined front+backend and
a PII 300 as a second frontend).
Only if you want a limited-use frontend. You can only
Only if you want a limited-use frontend. You can only play mpeg2 on
it, which means no automatic transcoding, no dvds, etc. It is a good
way to breathe life into older hardware, but I can't recommend this
card to anyone with a fast machine.
That's what I use it for: an advanced VCR.
VCRs can fast forward and rewind. The PVR-350 can't, it's not supported.
Are you talking about the speed adjust? It can certainly skip forward and
backward in time.
The only thing I'm aware that it can't do is the speed up/slow down -- I
have another frontend that can use that feature
On Thu, Feb 08, 2007 at 09:35:54AM -0500, Jeff Simpson wrote:
Only if you want a limited-use frontend. You can only play mpeg2 on
it, which means no automatic transcoding, no dvds, etc. It is a good
way to breathe life into older hardware, but I can't recommend this
card to anyone with
On Wed, Feb 07, 2007 at 10:07:28AM -0500, Ricardo Lugo wrote:
On Feb 6, 2007, at 10:04 AM, Jeff Simpson wrote:
#3, Framebuffer is slow slow slow slow, and it EATS cpu. I have a 3ghz
machine, but the menus are still slow. I often find the X session
using 50 or 60% of my cpu, just SITTING
#1, MPEG Output on the PVR-350 is working, but mostly unsupported by
advanced features. Things like fast forward and rewind don't work,
frequency scaling doesn't work, things like that. It does technically
still play video, but only native MPEG2 (no mpeg4, no alternate
formats, etc). The
Zitat von Jeff Simpson [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I see it often if I leave it in the list of recordings where it shows
a small preview, that alone will eat up 30-40% of cpu. actually using
it to display something eats more. The hacks to let you play a DVD or
other format of video through XV on the
On 2/1/07, Hans Verkuil [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
Recently I've seen several comments that PVR350 support would not work
or would be removed from MythTV. While it is true that there is no
current maintainer for the PVR350 code in MythTV (AFAIK), that doesn't
mean that it doesn't work.
On Tue, Feb 06, 2007 at 10:04:56AM -0500, Jeff Simpson wrote:
On 2/1/07, Hans Verkuil [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
Recently I've seen several comments that PVR350 support would not work
or would be removed from MythTV. While it is true that there is no
current maintainer for the
On Friday 02 February 2007 01:56, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Boleslaw Ciesielski writes:
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
The problem I have is with the ivtv_fb.ko
module. It loads without any errors, but TV-Out remains a blue
screen in 0.9; unlike in 0.8 where upon loading ivtv_fb.ko, which
happens
Boleslaw Ciesielski writes:
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
The problem I have is with the ivtv_fb.ko
module. It loads without any errors, but TV-Out remains a blue screen
in 0.9; unlike in 0.8 where upon loading ivtv_fb.ko, which happens long
before starting X and loading ivtv_xdriver, the TV-Out
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