On Wed, Nov 22, 2000 at 09:47:58PM +0100, Gerd Knorr wrote: > > pinnacle. But the driver says it's a radtv (or something like that) not a > > pro model. Perhaps that model doesn't has radio and the driver doesn't > > enables it? > > bttv identifies the cards by the PCI subsystem ID. Might be pinnacle uses the > same ID for both pro/nonpro. Hauppauge does it this way too, _all_ Hauppauge ok. > cards have the same ID. The same is true for other vendors too. That's why > bttv has the extra radio insmod option. There is simply no easy, generic > way to figure out if a particular card is the version with or without radio. are u saying that passing the option radio=1 to bttv is not enough? Do i have to load any other module as well??? -- Tiago Pascoal uRD Software Engineer Altitude Software (formerly Easyphone) tiago.pascoal@xxxxxxxxxxxx www.altitude.com + 351 217 20 50 00 main + 351 217 20 50 90 fax Av. dos Combatentes 43, 8 1600 Lisbon, PORTUGAL In the 1980s, Charles Goldfarb invented SGML, an elegant metalanguage focusing on the careful composition of reusable structured data, and thousands loved it. In the 1990s, Tim Berners-Lee created HTML, a hobbled subset of SGML that completely ignored the latter's fundamental tenets... and revolutionized the world economy, creating fortunes and moving nations. As it conquered the universe, the weaknesses of HTML began to show, and it dawned on everyone that they needed something more flexible, more generic, more reusable, something more like... yes, SGML. They threw out 90% of the standard to get at that golden 10% that preserved SGML's essence, gave it a cooler name, and XML was born. Everyone was happy and had their place in the sun (except those HyTime guys). --Matthew Gertner