HeyGuys, I finally got my LED strip to answer the effects loader on Hyperion Website. I am using a Rpi Zero W with 5V 20 A Power Source and Ws812b Ledstrip with 300 LEDs. So it was time to connect to the TV. Using Hyperbian Alpha 10
I know most of you use a video capture device with loop. I did not want to spend more money and I had a spare HDMI splitter. I tried connecting it with my BTV device, which is a Android 9 Operating System with Apps like Netflix, TV, Movies, etc.. (similar to a fire TV stick) but the led did not light up with the images, I tried activating screen capture USB ( no device connected) and the other option of capturing device with those 2 options, but still did not work.
Spare HDMI splitter? it should be capable of HDCP, thats a safety copy protect protocol signal over HDMI, devices that are not equiped by this protocol and have not the feature of HDCP can not transmit/split DRM protected signals.
but the led did not light up with the images, I tried activating screen capture USB ( no device connected) and the other option of capturing device with those 2 options, but still did not work.
You can turn the DHCP address into static, by going mostly to LAN settings and see if the router recognizes the Raspi, then you can use the option to make it static by enabling the feature into the router.
I tested it on Ubuntu 16.04 with OBS and works perfectly out of the box via USB in both its "PC" mode and "external storage" mode.
Avermedia doesn't officially support Linux but the "uvcvideo" module does the job flawlessly.
If you want to record HDCP protected content, there is hardware available that can strip this before you input into your capture card. For instance there is a SCART to HDMI converter that also has an HDMI input that passes through without HDCP.
LabVIEW can do it, though without NI Hardware. Epiphan ( ) sells a PCIe and USB DVI (and VGA) capture device that shows up in windows as a WDM device. IMAQdx can capture directly from WDM devices. HDMI can be converted to DVI via a cable change, although the embedded audio in the HDMI will be dropped.
If you need to do the capture at some distance from the source, you may consider converting the HDMI signal to HD-SDI via mini converter from Blackmagic, and capturing that data via one of Blackmagic's Decklink cards. These cards also show up as WDM devices in windows, and LabVIEW/IMAQdx sees them just fine.
Keep in mind that those Epiphan solutions appear to only capture unencrypted DVI/HDMI transmissions. Many HDMI devices output encrypted streams which this would be unable to capture. The NI Digital Video Analyzer system ( ), on the other hand, can do analysis of an encrypted image stream. Although I don't know offhand, I would not be suprised if it cannot do straight capturing due to licensing issues with decrypting HDMI. Such restrictions would likely be present in any device that can accept an encrypted stream.
If you plan to widely deploy this solution, you'll need to consider the liscensing of IMAQdx as well. The Ephianan devices come with sample software for capture and display purposes, which may or may not fulfill all your requirements.
I have an Intensity Pro card as well but I cannot get HDMI video in MAX, although I am able to see video using their supplied software. The Region of Interest settings don't seem correct either (they are too small) but I can't change them.
Had no end of trouble with the Blackmagic card. I just happened to get lucky that MAX was able to configure for the resolution of my camera system on one computer and one resolution. On another computer and different install of Labiew and IMAQ it did not recognize the resolution and format and was not able to capture. I think it is a problem with the BlackMagic driver but BlackmagicDesign swears it was the Labview driver. (im gonna cut some fingers off one of these days). Many emails and message board entries on BlackMagic left me hanging.
I bit the bullet and got the Epiphan card and it's all good now. Any resolution is supported and the Epiphan driver and IMAQ hold hands famously. And my camera doesn't output HDCP if the receiver(TV) doesn't acknoledge it so i capture HDMI till the cows come home. Its a shame because the BlackMagic card is so cheap. Also got a Shuttle that had the same problems. It's probably identical inside so that makes sense. I suggest you spend the kilobuck and get the Epiphan as it was cheaper then the hours I spent trying to get the Intensity Pro working.
The Mimo Vue capture touch display is extremely sturdy build for commercial and corporate work. With cable management built into the optional base that weighs 1.3 kg (almost 3 lbs), this ensures a stable HDMI touch screen on the table or desktop. For wall, pole, or other installations, the HD capacitive touchscreen display has a VESA75 pattern on the back.
It has to be a way. I have always wanted to use a mini PC (barebone) from conferences and classroom (connected via VGA/HDMI to a projector) while using mi Laptop or Windows Tablet as Main / Extension Monitor.
This would be an AMAZING gadget for anyone working in IT!
Making the laptop into a keyboard and mouse and display for a server, or switch, or what have you.
Or Raspberry PI for developers and tinkerers
The way it has been achieved is the display panel itself has two HDMI inputs (on its controller board), one is tied to the SBC and the other brought outside the case as HDMI in, then the unit power switch is a 3 position (on, off, display only).
Just posting that I would also be interested in an hdmi in expansion card. Or even better an Hdmi card that can do both in/out based on mode selection (in bios, software driver, or manual hardware switch next to port).
Alternative 2: Have the framework mainboard connect to the screen using usb c and provide some ability to convert/mount third party screens . We could then upgrade our screen with any portable monitor product (ex: asus zenscreen) that would fit into the framework frame. There are a lot of options in that space (screens with batteries, screens with touchscreen/pen input). This would give framework users a lot of upgrade options without framework having to design and manufacture a bunch of different screen products.
There are single-chip HDMI-to-USB solutions like the MS2130, which should fit in an expansion module. Unfortunately documentation for that chip is rather sparse (read: does not publicly exist at all), but there is this open-source design that makes use of it: GitHub - YuzukiHD/YuzukiLOHCC-PRO: Low cost USB3.2Gen1 HDMI-USB Video Acquisition With Loop Out (Loop Out HDMI Capture Card) base on MS2130 & MS9332
Question: If I obtained a HDMI stremaing capture device (like an Elgato or Avermedia USB capture device or card), ad run the HDMI from the GOpro into the capture device - can I then record directly from it into Premiere Pro?
Yesterday I installed a Blackmagic decklink 4k card in my edit computer (pci-e slot ) which has SDI in and out. I will eventually put hdmi signal from BMPCC or Nikon d800 into that card, to see if I can 'view' the image live from a field monitor output (also SDI). Ideally, I'd like to go through resolve to add luts or grades, and maybe even key stuff ( 2 signals in, one being alpha ). I have no clue what will happen.
Ordered hdmi to SDI converter, so when it comes I can hook the stuff up. See what happens. I have NO desire to capture with the computer at all, as I use Atomos and pass through hdmi while recording to SSD the intermediate codec (higher bit rate than SD card h264 4.2.0 stuff ). Becomes 4.2.2 space to SSD, and I just dump that into computer for editing.
I'm connecting an XA10 to a computer (Windows) via HDMI with a video capture card, to use the XA10 as a remote camera for a livestream event, but when I connect everything the HDMI output drops to only 480 rather than the 1080 I have it set to push out.
As you can see in the video below, I have the HDMI output set to 1080, but when I attach the capture card to the computer, that setting greys out and the HDMI status says it's only pushing out 480. And I can visually confirm on the computer that the feed is SD and not FHD.
I don't know the manufacturer of the camera card. It's NOT Elgato's product. It's a lower-cost knock-off that I bought from the The Camera Store in Calgary, Canada. I'm working through troubleshooting with them; they say they've never had a customer report this problem before. FWIW, looks like the same card is sold on Amazon by MavisLink, but I suspect they're just using the same manufacturer as the The Camera Store.
Found my solution: Get a better capture card. The HDMI output works just fine with the Elgato Cam Link 4K. You get what you pay for, I guess. I exchanged the knock-off card for the Elgato and all is now well.
I think the FW-to-HDMI adapter goes the other direction, from FW to HDMI. Look up the adapter's specs and carefully try to decide if it is bi-directional. Don't think so. HDMI is a just a bunch of cables in a bundle with a fancy connector. You need a convertor that will break HDMI out to video and audio feeds and then a convertor that will encode the video and audio signals to firewire's data stream.
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