(I use Scopebox in a live venue where I set up a multicamera video recording system, it works well with a Kona card on a desktop machine.) ScopeBox (or applications like it) need a real-time conversion like a Kona LHi would give you on a desktop machine or an I/O Express would give you on a laptop.neither of those devices store video, they simply convey it into the computer and the computer has to deal with it. ![]() ![]() ![]() The only signals that come out of it in real-time are digital and analog video and audio.which would require an I/O device to convert, as if you were ingesting footage from an HD VTR. It really isn't an "I/O" (In/Out) signal 's a digital disk based recorder. The footage is intended to be transferred in a disk-to-disk data transfer afterward. There is no accommodation for a "conversion" to a format that a computer could ingest on the fly as it's designed to write the file to its own harddrive. ![]() That said, Kipro is definitly capable as an I/O device, but it lacks the "proper" connectivity to a MacBook Pro (to be used in connection with Scopebox it seems).Īctually, the KiPro is designed for input and output in conventional video signals in real-time. I'm aware of the difference between an I/O and a capturing device.
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