![]() ![]() , if they were to test every single combination of AMD and Intel system they would never release anything. your card should work on every x86 machine AMD or Intel. If you need any more details I will be glad to answer.Ĭhristiaan Lefering wrote:PS. I must add that I always do my recordings with the option "Stop capture if dropped frames are detected" enabled, and it never stops. Anyway, I'm just trying to be clear that although my computer is a regular desktop, it has enough speed to capture the video quality I need, and several months ago it was capturing videos perfectly. In my recordings I evaluated that this format needs, at average, a write speed of about 10 MB/s and my physical HD can reach about 100 MB/s. The Disk Speed Test utility also tells that my physical HD has enough speed for the video format I use which is the AVI Motion JPEG format. I tried even creating a virtual disk in memory with 4GB of capacity and recording the video there to see if my HD as slow but the problem kept exactly the same. I always make sure that both the CPU and HD has no concurrent activity when I'm recording. ![]() My computer is a regular one: Windows 7 Home Edition 64 bits, 8 GB, a mechanical HD SATA 2 of 1 TB, Intel Core i7 2600. The driver that was available several moths ago when I purchased my device, an Intensity Shuttle for USB 3.0, didn't have such problem. In this version, as it was in 10.4, the delay grows very fast - in 6 minutes the delay sums up to several seconds. In version 10.4.1 the delay became small but still was noticeable. I was experiencing the same problem in version 10.4. I'm experiencing a very big delay between the audio and video captured using the Media Express.
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