Hi, Here is a easy way: just use guvcview and increase the vid_sleep parameter in .guvcviewrc, this will make the video grabber thread sleep for the amount you specified, you can then just capture the resulting video into avi, To increase speed just fix the avi fps value in avidemux or some other avi tool (matroska won't work as it sets a per frame timestamp)
Best regards, Paulo 2009/12/21 Dâniel Fraga <frag...@gmail.com>: > On Mon, 21 Dec 2009 09:48:13 +0200 > Borislav Gerassimov <b...@omegatim.com> wrote: > >> I'm using "motion" at home, it has a timelapse function, that may be >> useful in your case. >> http://www.lavrsen.dk/twiki/bin/view/Motion/WebHome > > But he doesn't want to process lots of single frame snapshot > files. > > -- > Linux 2.6.32: Man-Eating Seals of Antiquity > > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-uvc-devel mailing list > Linux-uvc-devel@lists.berlios.de > https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/linux-uvc-devel > _______________________________________________ Linux-uvc-devel mailing list Linux-uvc-devel@lists.berlios.de https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/linux-uvc-devel