yohanan@csd4.milw.wisc.edu (Steven J. Yohanan) (02/06/88)
I have a AT-compatible and am interesting in `grasping' video images from
a VHS player (or camera) onto the computer's screen. I have been informed
about a technique called Gen-Locking (sic.), but don't know of any peripherals
available for my type of machine which utilize this technique. I have heard
of such a device [dubbed: `Gen-Lock'] for the Amiga, but haven't run across
one for AT-type machines.
If anyone has any information on Gen-Lock devices or any other type of
peripherals that performs the desired task, please leave me E-mail.
Thanks in advance....
Steven J. Yohanan <yohanan>
=======================================================================
Internet: yohanan@csd4.milw.wisc.edu
Bitnet: yohanan%csd4.milw.wisc.edu@wiscmac3.bitnet
{seismo|nike|ucbvax|harvard|rutgers!ihnp4}!uwvax!uwmcsd1!uwmcsd4!yohananpozar@hoptoad.uucp (Tim Pozar) (02/07/88)
yohanan@csd4.milw.wisc.edu (Steven J. Yohanan) wrote: > > I have a AT-compatible and am interesting in `grasping' video images from > a VHS player (or camera) onto the computer's screen. I have been informed > about a technique called Gen-Locking (sic.), but don't know of any peripherals > available for my type of machine which utilize this technique. I have heard > of such a device [dubbed: `Gen-Lock'] for the Amiga, but haven't run across > one for AT-type machines. > Gee, when I used to be a tech in Video, Genlock was a box that locked up on a master oscilator or any video source and regenerated the H and V sync pulses for cameras and synced up VTRs so you could do things like switching between sources without loss of sync. I think what you want is a frame grabber. Some sort of high speed A to D flash converter. -- ======================================================================= | ...sun!hoptoad!\ Tim Pozar | | >fidogate!pozar Fido: 1:125/406 | | ...lll-winken!/ PaBell: (415) 788-3904 | | USNail: KKSF 77 Maiden Lane San Francisco CA 94108 | =======================================================================
nkhan@polyslo.UUCP (Naseer Mohammed Khan) (02/08/88)
The genlock for the Amiga only affords you the ability to put the VCR image
underneath the Amiga's normal image and possibly export this to another VCR.
Sort of like a video-titler. To import the VCR's image and place it in
computer memory you need either a frame grabber and supplementary software/
hardware to work with it, or you need some sort of a digitizer. Of course, for
serious work, your VCR needs to the expensive single-frame stopping kind!
Besides, for really serious video work, you probably need to get a quantity of
one of this well-known system: an AMIGA {500,1000,2000}. All the peripherals
for such video development are available for it and improvements to such
systems are rapidly being worked out.
---> "Only AMIGA makes it possible." :-) <---
- Naseer Khan