Jon Webb wrote: > This is pretty much a guess, but I suspect that if the camera locks the > box up when you first plug it in you should be looking at the USB or V4L > configuration, not the camera driver. When you plug the camera in the > USB driver is invoked to figure out what device you're now using, and > then the Video for Linux layer does some monkeying around, and I'd guess > that it is either the USB layer is not recognizing the dvice and failing > (though it really shouldn't) or the Video 4 Linux layer is dying for > some other reason. I don't think the camera driver gets involved until > you actually try to use it. You might try getting your system in synch > with some standard distribution and seeing if that helps.
Actually, I don't think it's usb or v4l, as I've got a usb scanner, wacom tablet and mouse. I've got a v4l capture card that works fine. I've moved it to a different machine, and will have to recompile the driver because it uses the usb-ohci module rather than the usb-uhci module. At least I guess that's the problem since, the driver fails with unresolved symbol errors. > > Jon Webb > > > -- J > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Video4linux-list mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/video4linux-list > > -- Until later: Geoffrey [EMAIL PROTECTED] I didn't have to buy my radio from a specific company to listen to FM, why doesn't that apply to the Internet (anymore...)? _______________________________________________ Video4linux-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/video4linux-list
