huh, the OBS forums has a link to the
https://www.elgato.com/en/gaming/game-capture-hd60 which says it takes
unencrypted hdmi, that should work, it's a little cheaper than the DHgate
IPTV solutions I posted earlier, although I still think that's a slick way
to go about it. The blackmagic intensit
By way if you need to get rid of the HDCP here is the device, still on good
ol'
Amazon...
https://www.amazon.com/ViewHD-Powered-Splitter-1080P-Model/dp/B004F9LVXC
On Sun, Nov 20, 2016 at 9:08 PM, Chuck Hast wrote:
> I am actually using OBS-Studio, we are feeding a streaming service, and I
> am
I am actually using OBS-Studio, we are feeding a streaming service, and I am
using OBS-Studio as the interface from the A/V system. I have a HDMI output
S-Video, and composit plus audio to play with. I would like to use the HDMI
out
and feed it into a HDMI input let OBS-Studio do it's thing (that p
Here are 2 of the devices mentioned for sale on DHgate:
http://www.dhgate.com/product/mine-mv-e1002-hd-video-encoder-h-264-hdmi/373348863.html#s1-0-1b;searl|3343559327
http://www.dhgate.com/product/v-receivers-radio-tv-broadcasting-equipment/374514031.html#s1-4-1b;searl|4226391069
On Sun, Nov 20,
The IPTV solution would be pretty slick, you could use VLC to write it to a
file, or whatever other software should support an mpegts stream
On Sun, Nov 20, 2016 at 8:23 PM, Nat Taylor wrote:
> Here is some useful information: https://www.
> mythtv.org/wiki/Video_capture_card#Digital_Capture
Here is some useful information:
https://www.mythtv.org/wiki/Video_capture_card#Digital_Capture_Cards
On Sun, Nov 20, 2016 at 5:14 PM, Chuck Hast wrote:
> Folks,
> I need to capture video/ from a video system. This is the common stream off
> of a switcher, it can be pulled from a HDMI port (prob
Folks,
I need to capture video/ from a video system. This is the common stream off
of a switcher, it can be pulled from a HDMI port (probably the best) or
there is
RGB and audio, and I believe there is S-Video too.
Any suggestions as to what is a good device at a good price? This will of
course
be
On 11/20/2016 05:04 PM, Ken Stephens wrote:
> These vague errors all point to cabling. I would get into the desktop
> and unplug and replug ever cable you see. Especially if this desktop is
> older than a few years. While inside I would vacuum out all the dust
> and assorted other cruft, too.
Roderick Anderson wrote:
> Denis,
>
> I didn't follow your first thread si may be offering something already
> suggested.
>
> Open the case and reseat all the cables and check that any jumpers on the
> HD are actually jumpering.
>
> Many years ago I had a bad jumper on a (SCSI) drive that caused al
On 11/20/2016 6:16 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
> I use fat16 and fat32 formatted USB flash drives for _EXACTLY_
> *ONE* purpose.
> It is to transfer data to/from a Windows machine.
>
> When I plug one into my Debian machine I want totally unfettered
> read/write access.
> [when logged in as root or *
Denis,
I didn't follow your first thread si may be offering something already
suggested.
Open the case and reseat all the cables and check that any jumpers on the
HD are actually jumpering.
Many years ago I had a bad jumper on a (SCSI) drive that caused all kind or
odd errors and unseated cab
On Sun, 20 Nov 2016, Denis Heidtmann wrote:
> Has the hardware messed up the software? Sometimes it boots fine, esp.
> after I run the recovery mode. The "sometimes" nature points to hardware,
> but the repair of dpkg errors points to messed up sw. I will try your
> suggestion after running a mem
On Sun, Nov 20, 2016 at 9:16 AM, Rich Shepard
wrote:
> On Sun, 20 Nov 2016, Denis Heidtmann wrote:
>
> > Ideas?
>
>If this were my problem the first thing I'd do is separate hardware from
> software issues. You wrote that you have a live USB drive with some
> distribution on it. Try booting t
On Sun, 20 Nov 2016, Denis Heidtmann wrote:
> Ideas?
If this were my problem the first thing I'd do is separate hardware from
software issues. You wrote that you have a live USB drive with some
distribution on it. Try booting the problem host with that, or even another
distribution.
If th
The desktop machine continues to fail in various ways. All the
observations and trials are too varied and random (or so it appears to me)
that I do not know what to relate and what is a distraction.
This AM on boot I got "error: attempt to read or write outside of hd0"
Press any key to continue.
I appreciate your help. Now watch for postings on my @#$% desktop. It
seems to be having problems. May also relate to packages.
-Denis
On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 11:34 PM, Tom wrote:
> I am glad that it sorted your problem.
>
> All you need to do, what I do anyway, is to run the auto remove com
On Sun, 20 Nov 2016, Richard Owlett wrote:
> /etc/fstab wants a specific label, UUID, or /dev/sdX. What I could find
> about pmount.allow did not address issue. After all FAT filesystems do not
> have concept of ownership. Help please.
Richard,
I have found that most of my USB flash drives ar
I use fat16 and fat32 formatted USB flash drives for _EXACTLY_
*ONE* purpose.
It is to transfer data to/from a Windows machine.
When I plug one into my Debian machine I want totally unfettered
read/write access.
[when logged in as root or *ANY* user ID]
/etc/fstab wants a specific label, UUID,
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