Over the last ten years, I have owned a lot of video capture cards for my various webcast systems. I have built many mobile webcast workstations in computer cases and most recently in road-rack cases.
The HDMI 2.1 capture cards are starting to appear nearly three years after the Xbox Series X and PS5 launched. The HDMI 2.1 capture cards are starting to appear nearly three years after the Xbox ...
Beyond simply recording what's on your screen, these HDMI devices can be used capture content from cable boxes and share a ...
Magewell’s USB Capture family has long been the gold standard for professional video capture devices, earning a reputation for being the easiest and most reliable way to bring video and audio signals ...
In a previous article, I discussed how I used an inexpensive ($25) video capture card to capture HDMI output from a physical system (an Intel NUC) and stream it via USB to another system (my laptop).
Elgato’s going all-in on HDMI 2.1. The company just announced a pair of capture cards that support the latest display technology specification. The 4K X and 4K Pro offer true HDR10 support, USB 3.2 ...
Sipeed has released a new variant of its NanoKVM-USB low-cost USB KVM adapter, which upgrades 2K 30 FPS capture and 4Kp30 ...
HDMI capture cards open a world of options for anyone who needs to ingest a video stream from one system to another. Game streamers can use an HDMI capture card to offload encoding workloads to a ...
Short Version: The AVerMedia MTVHDDVRR is a PCI Express video capture card with HDMI, component, S-Video, and composite inputs. The card retails for around $100 (you can find it for close to $90 ...
After some previous experiments, Tom Fenton uses a Newest HDMI Video Capture Card and different software to display the output to see if he can get sharper images. In a previous article, I discussed ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results