| Home
| Calendar
| Mail Lists
| List Archives
| Desktop SIG
| Hardware Hacking SIG
Wiki | Flickr | PicasaWeb | Video | Maps & Directions | Installfests | Keysignings Linux Cafe | Meeting Notes | Linux Links | About BLU |
I know this doesn't answer the question as asked, but if you can
afford it I'd suggest you get a Hauppauge PVR-x50 PCI card and use the
ivtv driver. These cards have hardware MPEG encoding. You plug your
VCR into the card and from Linux you just cat /dev/video0 >
my-video.mpg. From there a simple re-encode "fix" the mpeg stream and
add the DVD VOBU packets will give you a perfect DVD video -- I can
provide you the re-encode script if you want.
There's a USB PVR device but I don't think the ivtv project supports
it.
-derek
Scott Ehrlich <scott at ehrlichtronics.com> writes:
> I have an ADS Tech USB 701 box connected to a 1 Gig P3 with 384 Meg RAM
> with a DVD recorder. I'm trying to capture composite video from a VHS
> tape. The setup is VCR > ADS box via RCA plugs > PC via USB 2.0.
>
> Using XP Pro, the included Ulead Videostudio 8 program loses track of the
> capture, as it takes up the full cpu cycles and gets overloaded.
>
> My budget won't allow for a new PC.
>
> What are my possible Linux options for capture via USB, editing captured
> video as needed, and burning to DVD?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Scott
--
Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, SM '95 MIT Media Laboratory
Member, MIT Student Information Processing Board (SIPB)
URL: http://web.mit.edu/warlord/ PP-ASEL-IA N1NWH
warlord at MIT.EDU PGP key available