On 3/24/2008 3:20 PM, Jacob Meuser wrote:
On Mon, Mar 24, 2008 at 01:45:24PM -0500, Claus wrote:
On 3/23/2008 4:57 PM, Jacob Meuser wrote:
On Sun, Mar 23, 2008 at 12:31:31PM -0700, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
Moreover it is also hard to justify time
spend in hacking those things if there is relatively inexpensive
hardware solution (video input devices supported by
bktr can be bought for about $150 now vs a good USB camera is probably
at least $50).
heh. check the second-hand store for bktr/bktr compatible hardware.
of course, a camcorder is much more bulky than a USB camera ...
I hope somebody who knows more about this issue put the end to this
pointless discussion.
I think you've covered the bases pretty well. although, if someone
does come up with a good, clean driver, who knows ...
I played once with my bktr device and had success repeatedly capturing
still images and serving them on a web server.
You should be able to find wired or wireless cams with composite output
for fairly cheap (quality probably reflects price). Eg ebay item
170204183053 is a wired cam for $11 or item 130207574995 which is a
wireless cam for $40 (quite similar to what I used while playing
around). So there is no need for a bulky camcorder but it's still an
option and you might get better image quality.
In case there is interest the dmesg excerpt:
bktr0 at pci0 dev 12 function 0 "Brooktree BT848" rev 0x11: irq 5
bktr0: Intel Smart Video III/VideoLogic Captivator PCI, <no> tuner.
and a starting point to recreate my setup:
#! /bin/sh
while true; do
bktr2jpeg -f cap.jpg -s 0 -w 640 -h 480 -q 100
sleep 5
done
we don't have bktr2jpeg in ports, but graphics/videod does something
similar.
Just for the record. bktr2jpeg is fairly easy to compile on OpenBSD.
http://core.de/~coto/projects/bktr2jpeg/
Good luck,
Claus