![]() The problem with this device is the drivers either don’t work or the drivers are on a CDROM and these days people are buying computers that don’t have any optical drives. This video capture USB device is a widely sold product to convert VHS over to a digital format. The Eas圜AP converts an RCA or S-video source into a USB video and audio capture device known as a Sound, video and game controller device in Windows. On VLC go to Media -> Open Capture Device. Eas圜ap SMI Grabber/SM-USB 007/eMPIA USB 2861 Capture Drivers.Here are the steps under Ubuntu 16.04 and VLC 2.2.7 This solution consists of using just VLC to capture both audio and video. Click on ‘Apply’ and click ‘OK’ and run the file to install it. Click on the ‘compatibility’ tab and check the box 'Run this program in compatibility mode for and select Windows operating system from the drop down. Then a third software to merge the video and audio Right-click on the driver setup file and click on ‘properties’.Other audio tool, like Audacity, to capture audio.This is a solution to capturing the audio (along with the video) from a camcorder using Eas圜AP and VLC.Īll posts I found use three different software to capture video and audio: More hardware-software testing required maybe?Ī to more acceptable videoformats configurable recording button with the same pause and continue functionality as with raw streams would be great in VLC. Anything not to get these ENORMOUS raw avi's which are only viewable with VLC itself. Considering the large transcoding times one would even stick to the original mpeg(2)-format. ![]() The resulting files could be easily cut up and transcoded afterwards. Take the Eas圜ap stick e.g., I used it with software from Arcsoft in Windows - I'm sorry - which gave me the choice to record directly to mpeg1 or mpeg2 (also from PAL). ![]() The VLC makers say that recording like this takes the raw stream from the recorded device 'as-is' and that there is nothing to do about it. The recording button of VLC works well many a time, but the resulting avi-files are really unacceptably large (1 min recording = 1 Gb file size here). Too messed up/complex interface, and it all also depends on the force of the used machine and the used libraries. a tv or recorder with scart/AV/composite/s-video to usb (v4l).īut also VLC is far from ideal. VLC is probably the only relativily decent thing Linux has for recording from e.g. h/x264 mp4/mkv video with the usually well-corresponding aac-audio codec means havoc in VLC. Try the regular mpeg audio codec with any video format whenst recording-converting with VLC.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |