DViCO: Difference between revisions

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** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 RT Gold|FusionHDTV5 RT Gold]] - supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 RT Gold|FusionHDTV5 RT Gold]] - supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 RT Lite|FusionHDTV5 RT Lite]] - supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 RT Lite|FusionHDTV5 RT Lite]] - supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 USB Gold|FusionHDTV5 USB Gold]] - supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 USB Gold|FusionHDTV5 USB Gold]] - digital supported, analog not yet supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 Express|FusionHDTV5 Express]] - not supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 Express|FusionHDTV5 Express]] - not supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 PCI nano|FusionHDTV5 PCI nano]] (Korea only) digital supported, analog not yet supported
** the nano's (Korea only)
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV5 USB nano|FusionHDTV5 USB nano]] (Korea only) digital supported, analog not yet supported
** F6 Cool
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV6 Cool|FusionHDTV6 Cool]] - not supported
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV7 RT Gold|FusionHDTV7 RT Gold]] - soon
** [[DViCO FusionHDTV7 Cool|FusionHDTV7 Cool]] - not supported





Revision as of 17:27, 6 February 2008

DViCO produces DVB-T, DVB-S (mostly sold in Australia), and ATSC (mostly sold in the US and Korea) devices.

The ATSC frontend of the DViCO cards has been tested with 8-VSB (OTA) and QAM-256 (Cable) in the US. Source code is in video4linux + dvb-kernel CVS and kernel sources 2.6.13 and later for Gold, 2.6.15 and later for Lite.

Once the card decodes the analog broadcast signal, the result is a MPEG-2 transport stream in all 3 cases. So in theory software should not be able to tell the difference between them; the same software should work for all of them. But this is speculation right now ...

Some DViCO products include:


External Links