I don’t understand why anyone needs a software to achieve this in the first place? I’ve hooked the camera’s HDMI out to some cheap random USB-C HDMI capture card, and use OBS to record the stream. Easy, uncompressed, no restrictions to whichever settings their software lets you access.
That’s gotta be pretty jank. If I’m trying to connect a pro-sumer camera like in the article, I’d want the connection to be quality. Pro-sumer capture cards start at around $300.
I have a high end Canon myself, and the card does an excellent job. I bought it while living in China though, tech there costs a fraction of what you pay in the US.
I guess it depends on the app, but I just checked and both Skype and Teams show me the capture card as input source, and the preview picture looks fine. So I’m pretty sure it works in an actual call, though I haven’t tried it yet.
Both apps heavily compress the video signal though, even if you set the quality to 1080p, so I doubt it makes a huge difference compared to a regular webcam.
It’s easier to market based on hard numbers like resolution, so people are used to big res number = more better, but if that high res sensor is capturing a crap image, you’re going to get a crap image. Garbage in, garbage out.
I don’t understand why anyone needs a software to achieve this in the first place? I’ve hooked the camera’s HDMI out to some cheap random USB-C HDMI capture card, and use OBS to record the stream. Easy, uncompressed, no restrictions to whichever settings their software lets you access.
You’re kinda explaining Canon’s logic here though - they want you to pay for “convenience”.
So the $5 is the idiot tax then - for people that can’t figure it out themselves. Scummy as fuck when they could just out a youtube tutorial instead.
It’s essentially the same thing, but instead of paying for software, you’re using more complicated free software, and paying for the hardware.
The hardware cost me less than 5 bucks.
That’s gotta be pretty jank. If I’m trying to connect a pro-sumer camera like in the article, I’d want the connection to be quality. Pro-sumer capture cards start at around $300.
I have a high end Canon myself, and the card does an excellent job. I bought it while living in China though, tech there costs a fraction of what you pay in the US.
Can you use that in videocalling apps?
I guess it depends on the app, but I just checked and both Skype and Teams show me the capture card as input source, and the preview picture looks fine. So I’m pretty sure it works in an actual call, though I haven’t tried it yet.
Both apps heavily compress the video signal though, even if you set the quality to 1080p, so I doubt it makes a huge difference compared to a regular webcam.
The advantage of a camera is the lens, not the resolution
For a video call, I’m not sure that really matters a whole lot, but I guess that depends on the use case.
It’s easier to market based on hard numbers like resolution, so people are used to big res number = more better, but if that high res sensor is capturing a crap image, you’re going to get a crap image. Garbage in, garbage out.
There is a vitrual cam for OBS that spoofs the OBS output to a webcam you can use in zoom/teams/etc
I used a lot during covid.
https://obsproject.com/forum/resources/obs-virtualcam.949/
That word doesn’t work like that.