it should also be said that you cant use your pvr card for games. As there is a good 1 to 2 second lag due to onchip encoding,
my question is, will there ever be a fix to this (bypassing the encoder and getting a raw analog stream) On Sat, 2006-01-28 at 18:44 -0800, Craig Orsinger wrote: > Games, video cameras, and other video devices are generally connected > to a TV in one of two ways: > > 1) a radio frequency (RF) modulator, that generally will provide > output on channel 3 or 4, or > > 2) a composite video signal. This is not a "channel", but is > the TV signal that is sent over the air by broadcasters on > each channel. Such connections are usually labelled "video" > or "composite", as they are on the PVR150. > > If it's the former, you have you have your answer. If it's > the latter, then you should use the composite input of the > PVR150 as the camera input. > > On Sat, 2006-01-28 at 18:44 -0500, Gary Montalbine wrote: > > Gary Montalbine wrote: > > > I have an outside video camera that I am able to view thru the game > > > channel on my TV. I would like to view this on my monitor using IVTV and > > > ptune. However I can not find the channel frequency that my camera uses. > > > Does anyone know the frequency and can it be set up using ptune or > > > ivtv-tune? I use ntsc-cable. > > > > > > Thanks, > > > Gary > > > > Please. Anybody have any suggestions or can point me in the right > > direction? I would sure like to get my security camera on my display. > > > _______________________________________________ > ivtv-users mailing list > [email protected] > http://ivtvdriver.org/mailman/listinfo/ivtv-users _______________________________________________ ivtv-users mailing list [email protected] http://ivtvdriver.org/mailman/listinfo/ivtv-users
