VideoSpigot was made by a company called SuperMac, which was acquired by Radius, which went under a couple of years back. Some Radius support files are now available through this URL:
<http://www.radiusvintage.com> There is also a website at UC Berkeley that has a lot of the AV software and updates for things like the Spigot series: <http://www.sims.berkeley.edu/~jwang/cgi/av-faq/>. Depending on what cards you have and what machines you have them in, VideoSpigots allow analog video input and output from cameras, VCRs, TV tuners, etc, accelerate video processing (motion JPEG encoding/decoding and allow full-screen printing of your edited videos to videotape. On Thursday, October 11, 2001, at 02:24 PM, Joshuha Allen wrote: >I picked up an old Centris 650 the other night and was suprised to find >it contained 2 expansion cards; one has an RCA-type connector on it and >the other has a connector similar to a Mac monitor connection on it. Both >cards have chips on them that say Video Spigot. Does anyone have a clue >what these cards are for? Where can I get info or software for them? WHo >made the cards? Have I run across something good (hope so..^_^)? -- PCI-PowerMacs is sponsored by <http://lowendmac.com/> and... Small Dog Electronics http://www.smalldog.com | Refurbished Drives | -- Sonnet & PowerLogix Upgrades - start at $169 | & CDRWs on Sale! | Support Low End Mac <http://lowendmac.com/lists/support.html> PCI-PowerMacs list info: <http://lowendmac.com/lists/pci-powermacs.shtml> Send list messages to: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For digest mode, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subscription questions: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Archive:<http://www.mail-archive.com/pci-powermacs%40mail.maclaunch.com/> Using a Macintosh? Get free email and more at Applelinks! <http://www.applelinks.com>
