Also, I have seen mention of a PCMCIA version of the videum called the videum traveler. There is a driver for linux. See: http://mobility.eecs.umich.edu/videum.htm and http://www.thedirks.org/winnov/ (I forget how this thread started - other options are of course USB webcams, or if there is no USB getting a PCMCIA<->USB adapter, if quality is desired a PCMCIA<->Firewire card could be a good option) On Thu, 2002-06-06 at 23:44, Bill Rugolsky Jr. wrote: > On Thu, Jun 06, 2002 at 04:25:00PM +1200, Bret Comstock Waldow wrote: > > According to the PCMCIA card list, IBM Japan produces or produced a > > video capture card that has GNU/Linux drivers. I've never seen one, > > have no idea how well it works. But it's likely to be composite input > > if not s-video. > > > > That's all I remember. The PCMCIA docs will give you the same > > information I could look up about it. > > I have one of them -- the IBM Smart Capture Card. I had to order it > from Japan. > > It is composite input and does 320x240, IIRC. Apparently it came in > two models, one of which does hardware dithering. > > The driver is iscc. There were hacks to vic and other applications to > do viewing and capture. > > I haven't used it for several years, so I have no clue whether it is > still supported in any way. > > Regards, > > Bill Rugolsky > > > > _______________________________________________ > Video4linux-list mailing list > Video4linux-list@xxxxxxxxxx > https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/video4linux-list >