CaptyTV for Mac
rograndom writes "There's something very interesting on Apple's Japanese site. CaptyTV is part of Apple's 'Digital Hub', and it's a USB analog-to-digital video converter. A rough translatation from the site says talks about TiVo-like functionality, looking up program listings on the internet and recording at a certain time. It also talks about dumping your archived videos to DVD with the iMac's & PowerMac's SuperDrive. Sounds very cool, I hope it makes it over to this side of the world." And is that an external SuperDrive there on the sidebar?
It is good to see that at least Apple is still trying to do what the customer wants and not just what the big media companies think is best. This type of functionality is something that could be really usefull. With all the work the Apple is doing, it makes me want to run out and buy one just so I can be a part of all the new stuff. Go Apple!
THIS SPACE FOR RENT
This sounds like a great idea, but the web page is useless unless you can read Japanese. Maybe they could have done it in Engrish:
"Many happy video for your tape with iMac! I am disrespectful to commercials. Can you not see that I am serious?"
(No offense to our Japanese friends...)
Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
captytv is NOT an apple product...
see its homepage here
its something from a japenese company called pixela that makes video capture devices. this one is in particular an analog capture device that uses USB.
No where on the home page does it mention that theres any ReplayTV/TiVo type functionality... hell, theres no tuner...
USB doesn't have nearly enough bandwith for video
USB's 12 Mbps is plenty fast enough for compressed video, a la Tivo. Video compressed at 2 or 4 Mbps is acceptable for a PVR. At 8 Mbps, it's almost indistinguishable from uncompressed video to the untrained eye.
Of course USB has enough bandwidth for video! 12MB is way more than enough.
That aside, USB Video in converters have been avalible for years, litteraly. Don't you ever visit electronics shops?
Electronics shops from PC World and Dixons to Radio Shack and Wallmart stock them...
A quick search for the words "usb video capture" on Google throws up over five thousand results.
Please think before you post and stop wasting bandwidth!
the Formac Studio DV/TV(R) would be the better solution?
Lars T.
To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck
There is a paragraph that mentions the SuperDrive, but it is mostly in reference to the "Yano AH80FC" drive - which, if you click the link, turns out to be a FireWire hard drive.
It does have one of the best cases to match G4s I've ever seen, though.
± 29 dB
Oh great, another "USB doesn't have nearly enough badwidth for x" comment.
Let's be generous and say that the compressed video is using 1MB/second (More data then DVD video) That's only 8Mb/second, leaving enough bandwidth left over for uncompressed CD quailty stereo audio and your input devices. 12Mb/second is still a respectable amount of bandwidth for streaming applications.
USB bandwidth is 12Mb/sec, not 12MB/sec. That's Mega-Bits, not Mega-Bytes. Big difference.
Yes, USB video converters have been around for a while and they suck ass.
The text besides the picture in the sidebar says "If you have a Mac which isn't equipped with a
SuperDrive, external HD's are available", and then proceeds to link to one.
USb doesn't have enough bandwidth for uncompressed HD video or even compressed DV but it has plenty for an NTSC capture. A crappy motion JPEG NTSC capture only requires about 10Mb/s of bandwidth with an off the top of my head tally. If you're going to get more realistic you'd need even less bandwidth for an NTSC capture because of the way colour information is broadcast. A good video Y/Cr/Cb CODEC designed to grab a composite NTSC signal could probably shave a couple Mb/s off that number. The audio is negligible compared to that. USB video capture toys have been around for a long time, just look around sometime, they're all over and cheap.
I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
Here is a direct link.