Hello again, Brian. I understand... but well, I will try another day with the new version of gspca as you said. I didn't know that driver and if I get something interesting I'll come back to this mailing list to inform you.
I don't have still clear why did it happen. Do you think that it happened because the webcam was faulty? (It was cheap so I cannot expect the components inside are of the best quality). Or otherwise it happened because of this driver (sn9c20x) that maybe did something wrong at the low level with registers? Is there any other reason? Thanks. -- Regards, Pablo Castellano. On Mon, Aug 24, 2009 at 03:27:03PM -0400, Brian Johnson wrote: > > Forcing a model won't help because if the driver is unable to > communicate with the sensor over any of the valid i2c addresses used > by your camera even if you forced it to use a particular sensor it > still would not be able to talk to communicate with said sensor. > Seeing as how windows also seems to be failing to work correctly my > guess is that there actually is something wrong with your camera and > in that case i'm not really sure there is much you can do about. If > you want you could try the new gspca version of the driver that is > part of the v4l-dvb repository att linuxtv.org, but if the microdia > driver and the windows drivers are both not working correctly the gspc > version probably won't help either. > > > Brian Johnson > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Lets make microdia webcams plug'n play, (currently plug'n pray) To post to this group, send email to [email protected] Visit us online https://groups.google.com/group/microdia -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
