2009-01-26, 04:20 PM
Can someone please suggest a capture card (with remote) that is compatible with gbpvr? I have a Hauppauge Win-TV Go card (which I learned won't work due to lack of hardware MPEG compression).
My PC (PCI only - no PCIe or AGP slots):
dell dimension 2.8 GHz P4
500 MB RAM (can buy more if necessary)
120 GB HDD (can add more if needed)
WIn XP SP3
I know I need a card w/ hardware MPEG compression - but would also like to purchase a unit that comes with a remote.
I have a 52" Zenith HD projection TV (it has component (R, B, G) only for HD input - no HDMI) and the usual composit/s-video inputs. What video card would you recommend that I buy to drive the TV? (BTW - my TV is a 'monitor' - no NTSC or HD tuner).
My local (Memphis, TN) cable provider is Comcast - due to recent financial cutbacks I have elected to drop my HD service and now have just basic cable in SD - which looks terrible on my HD set. I don't plan to upgrade back to HD service for a couple of years (trying to pay off some student loans) so I am stuck with SD on HD TV for a while. I understand why it looks bad (e.g. 480 to 1080 interpolation) - but is there a video card that would 'up-convert' my SD signal to it doesn't look quite so bad on my HD TV (even if it isn't 'true' HD).
One option I believe would work is dual tuners - and use an antenna to pick up over the air HD channels, and the other for cable?
I don't have a lot to spend - would like to do this for less than $400 if possible (am I even close to being realistic here?)
Anyway - my main concern is that it works with gbpvr.
also - can I use my old Win-TV GO card for another input? I know I cant record of that card, but would it allow me to watch one channel while recording another, PIP, etc? (or should I just retire this to the scrap heap?)
If my $400 budget is unrealistic, could this be done in 2 stages: stage 1 - get capture card working (with remote) and record/watch on my PC.
Stage 2 - buy a 'good' video card and connect to my TV.
to recap - here are my limitations:
$400-$500 for project
No HDMI plug on HD TV
No PCI express or AGP port on PC
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
My PC (PCI only - no PCIe or AGP slots):
dell dimension 2.8 GHz P4
500 MB RAM (can buy more if necessary)
120 GB HDD (can add more if needed)
WIn XP SP3
I know I need a card w/ hardware MPEG compression - but would also like to purchase a unit that comes with a remote.
I have a 52" Zenith HD projection TV (it has component (R, B, G) only for HD input - no HDMI) and the usual composit/s-video inputs. What video card would you recommend that I buy to drive the TV? (BTW - my TV is a 'monitor' - no NTSC or HD tuner).
My local (Memphis, TN) cable provider is Comcast - due to recent financial cutbacks I have elected to drop my HD service and now have just basic cable in SD - which looks terrible on my HD set. I don't plan to upgrade back to HD service for a couple of years (trying to pay off some student loans) so I am stuck with SD on HD TV for a while. I understand why it looks bad (e.g. 480 to 1080 interpolation) - but is there a video card that would 'up-convert' my SD signal to it doesn't look quite so bad on my HD TV (even if it isn't 'true' HD).
One option I believe would work is dual tuners - and use an antenna to pick up over the air HD channels, and the other for cable?
I don't have a lot to spend - would like to do this for less than $400 if possible (am I even close to being realistic here?)
Anyway - my main concern is that it works with gbpvr.
also - can I use my old Win-TV GO card for another input? I know I cant record of that card, but would it allow me to watch one channel while recording another, PIP, etc? (or should I just retire this to the scrap heap?)
If my $400 budget is unrealistic, could this be done in 2 stages: stage 1 - get capture card working (with remote) and record/watch on my PC.
Stage 2 - buy a 'good' video card and connect to my TV.
to recap - here are my limitations:
$400-$500 for project
No HDMI plug on HD TV
No PCI express or AGP port on PC
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.