Hi Felix, On Friday 15 April 2011 06:04:23 Felix Shao wrote: > On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 12:50 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > On Wednesday 10 March 2010 22:27:20 Michał Górny wrote: > > > On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 11:31:55 +0100 Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > > > I don't have much experience with Windows, so I can't advice for a > > > > test application that would allow you to configure the resolution. > > > > I've heard that amcap is often used for testing, maybe you could give > > > > it a try. > > > > > > amcap wasn't much of help but I've tested several applications and all > > > provided resolutions seem to work on Windows. And I'm especially sure > > > that 160x120 works fine (which seems to be the preferred one with most > > > of the software). > > > > > > What should I do now? > > > > The next step would be to use a software USB sniffer on Windows to capture > > the device initialization sequence in Windows, and compare that to what's > > done by the uvcvideo driver. > > Hi, Is anybody still interesting on this?
Not that I know of. > I am using the same device and have same issue. Also have the similar ugly > workaround of software scaling... > > I can test with software USB sniffer both on Windows and Linux, please give > me a name of such software. SniffUSB (http://www.pcausa.com/Utilities/UsbSnoop/) is the newest free USB analyzer for Windows that I know of. It doesn't support Windows Vista or Windows 7 though. > But I hardly have USB knowledge, so I need send out sniffer result to > someone can understand it. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart _______________________________________________ Linux-uvc-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/linux-uvc-devel
