Elgato's Turbo.264 HD speeds video export intended for various Apple (and other) devices, but is it value for money?
I wasn't sure if I should post this here or in the other OS section. Move if you desire.
I have a Xubuntu 12.04 install and I want to install Win7 64bit along side it because I recently got an Elgato Game Capture HD for capturing my Xbox 360 gameplay. I have a youtube channel. I wish the Elgato worked in Linux but there's no supporting drivers yet so I have to install Windows.
Hello everyone, I haven't been on these forums in awhile. When buying a TV tuner card, if I have HD digital cable, what do I need to get? The TV tuner would be going after the cable box. Do I still need a digital card? I'm looking for a TV tuner card that fills the following things: 1. Works with a digital cable box 2. Has an onboard processor 3. Also has great Windows 7 support
Google may be the world’s largest mobile advertising company, but when it comes to devices that are driving the most advertising activity, it’s iOS and not Google’s Android that seems to set the heart racing. According to mobile browser and advertising company Opera Software, iOS devices like the iPhone and iPad continue to command the most usage among consumers.
In the company’s latest Stat
EyeTV, the highly regarded Mac OS X compatible PVR software from Elgato, has been updated with more 64-bit goodness and some crunchy bug fixes. But there are no new features this time.
As example, in Forefront TMG I can have a wpad entry in the DNS and computers discover it and auo oconfigure the web proxy, when the user try to go to the Internet he is prompet for the crendentials.
In iPhone or iPad it doesnt work. ¿Which is your recommedned way of implement an authenticated proxy that works for mobile devices?
Simple.TV, which attracted a lot of attention at this year’s International CES show in January, is finally announcing the ship date for its DVR solution for live and recorded TV: September 27 for U.S. customers, who can pick one up via the Simple.TV website for $149.
One thing that’s become apparent about the iPad mini during my past few days with it is just how well it fills the role of a second-screen device. The iPhone and the iPad both have their merits as a companion while lounging around and watching TV, but the iPad mini hits the sweet spot of portability, power and connectivity for that use case.
To express myself mildly, I'm not a fan of interfaces for mobile devices. At best, they seem clumsy makeshifts, tolerable only because nothing better is available. The only exception is KDE's Plasma Active, which not only works well on tablets, but, with its recently released version 3.0, remains the only mobile-inspired interface I can tolerate on a workstation