Hauppauge My Capture Ii Usb For Mac 803

Hauppauge My Capture Ii Usb For Mac 803

Hauppauge My Capture Ii Usb For Mac 803 Rating: 9,3/10 8335 reviews

Hauppauge’s HD PVR 2 is a video capture device. The idea is that you connect it between a video source, such as an Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3, and the TV or home theatre system you normally use. Instant pass-through means you can continue to play games as normal, provided that the HD PVR 2 is powered up.

I've got the HD-PVR. I initially had in running on a Windows box running SageTV. The SageTV software was unreliable at best and my machine bluescreened frequently. So I once Elgato came out with HD-PVR support in EyeTV, I switched. EyeTV works quite well for recording and outputting to my TV. However, EyeTV doesn't have any support for the IR Blaster so you can't change channels on your cable box through EyeTV.

You can buy a separate IR Blaster-like setup like ZephIR but I haven't done that. EyeTV takes care of all the (basic) video format issue. It records it to a native.eyetv format and lets you export to a variety of other formats.

Here's how I would use EyeTV to record a show: 1. Set my cable box to record a show 2. Set EyeTV to record the same show. Edit commercials out of the the recorded show 4. Export to AppleTV (or iPod) 5.

Enjoy It's not perfect but it works. The HD-PVR works great but only encodes in native h.264 and AAC stereo.

From their: The HD PVR supports AC-3 (5.1) or 2 channel AAC audio capture. Playstation emulator for mac sierra. AAC 2 channel is received using RCA audio inputs, or SPDIF when set to PCM. If using SPDIF with bit stream audio, you will get 5.1 AC-3 Dolby Digital. DTS audio is currently not supported. If you go with mpeg the video and audio will be separate files. An mpeg video and the AC-3 Dolby Digital. However this format will only be usable in a program like Final Cut.

I'm using the Hauppage HD-PVR with a nice HDPVRCapture program for the Mac available All the hard encoding work is done in the PVR box, so you can run the capture program on almost any hardware. A Mac Mini would be ideal. By default, HDPVRCapture generates a '.m2ts' file which contains the h.264 video and the AAC or AC-3 audio.

It will also convert to an MP4 container which allows the files to be played in iTunes. However, I have not had any luck getting these files to play on the AppleTV. I just play the.m2ts files on my Mac with VLC, or on my TV using a WDTV box. If you connected a Mac Mini directly to your home theatre system, that would be a great way to play the files. I haven't used the feature myself, but I believe that HDPVRCapture facilitates scheduled recordings and can use the HD-PVR's IR blaster to tune your cable box to the right channel when the recording starts.

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I am also using the HD-PVR with the HDPVRCapture software. There is a long-running thread about this software here: To reiterate the point that you can use practically any mac, I am using a 5-year-old G4 iBook and it works great. I have my Dish Network DVR connected to the Hauppauge via component and RCA audio cables, then USB to the iBook. I use it solely for archiving programs that I have recorded to the Dish DVR.

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