On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 5:42 PM, Paulo Assis <pj.as...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Alan,
>
> 2010/5/3 Alan <lameventa...@gmail.com>:
>> Hi Paulo,
>>
>> Thanks, with guvcview I was able to make it somehow better, this
>> program is very well done.
>>
>> But I still am nowhere near 30 fps (I get around 6 fps with low
>> light), and there is no single set of settings that allows me to have
>> decent framerates at low light and normal light conditions, so I have
>> to adjust it manually each time (the auto mode is not good).
>>
>
> This is very strange, I own a sphere AF, this camera is very similar
> to the pro9000, and by disabling "Exposure, Auto Priority" I can
> easily get 30 fps, although the image gets quite dark.
> I guess that to get a good balance between image quality and fps you
> need to adjust exposure manually, with guvcview you can use control
> profiles, this would save you time adjusting controls in similar
> situations.

Yes, the profiles are very useful. Your program in general is very
useful, I hope you make a stable release soon, some distros only ship
release versions of programs (like mine for example).

I wish the command line uvcdynctrl also supported loading/saving
profiles (just like alsactl store / alsactl restore).

What happens to the camera settings when the computer is rebooted? Are
they stored in some non-volatile memory in the camera? That would be
awesome.

Alan
_______________________________________________
Linux-uvc-devel mailing list
Linux-uvc-devel@lists.berlios.de
https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/linux-uvc-devel

Reply via email to