Hi McWannabe,
McWannabe wrote:
BTW - this might really help you, as laptops generally have slower hard drives - and your data streams have to compete with normal hard disk reads and writes on the system drive as you only have a single drive). They have a free trial, what's to lose?
This sounds pretty good, and I'll look into this as soon as I get a chance. My only concern is that I only have 2GB of RAM in my laptop. FWIW, the setup I have now is working very well for iPi Studio as far as video capture is concerned. I'm currently capturing from 4 cameras at 320 x 240; the cameras are connected directly to the laptop (the laptop has six ports), and the video is being recorded to an external eSATA RAID connected through an eSATA PCI ExpressCard. Also, I'm using the recommended Morgan MJPEG codec, a bargain at $20. I havg to say I'm impressed; so far iPi Recorder is not reporting any dropped frames, even after fairly long sessions.
McWannabe wrote:
Have you done any measurements with any test pattern shots? How do they look at diff resolutions, diff frame rates, and do they vary if you have 1, 2 or 3 cameras connected? What operating system are you using?
Not yet. I know I will want to eventually, but this isn't a priority for me at the moment as so far I'm not having problems with my current setup.
McWannabe wrote:
I gather that Vista can really slow you down compared to Win7.
Yes, I anticipate that Win 7 will improve things, but I'm running XP Pro on my laptop, which seems to be fine for Recorder. I'll eventually upgrade the workstation to Win 7 for iPi Studio, but I'm not going to do that until I'm confident that all the software and drivers I need are updated. (Updating software and drivers was a nightmare when I upgraded to Vista, and I had waited a three years before upgrading; I just don't want to go through that mess again so soon.)
Greenlaw