The Following User Says Thank You to ChakiShante For This Useful Post: | ||
|
2010-01-19
, 13:21
|
Posts: 75 |
Thanked: 41 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Suffolk, UK
|
#2
|
|
2010-01-19
, 16:58
|
|
Posts: 2,050 |
Thanked: 1,425 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Bucharest
|
#3
|
|
2010-01-19
, 17:03
|
Posts: 75 |
Thanked: 41 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Suffolk, UK
|
#4
|
|
2010-01-19
, 17:08
|
|
Posts: 161 |
Thanked: 55 times |
Joined on Dec 2006
@ SLO, CA; United States
|
#5
|
|
2010-01-19
, 17:14
|
Posts: 5 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Paris, France
|
#6
|
|
2010-01-19
, 17:15
|
Posts: 356 |
Thanked: 172 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Canada
|
#7
|
While nothing to sneeze at, I agree, how much of a quality gain to you expect from the cam? I mean, considering the optics, sensor size, etc, not THAT much is lost in JPEG compression.
There's a reason everyone uses JPEG instead of ,say, PNG which is open and lossless. JPEG compresses better at much lower cost cor both compression and decompression. Compressing and writing a PNG could take many seconds.
Most RAW formats (except for uncompressed RAW) are compressed, if lossless. Uncompressed, an image from the camera is 15MB, that takes up to 8 seconds to write on a standard card.
Again, it's not like I don't want it, I'm simply raising a few questions for discussion. Not a developer on Linux, but a developer and an amateur photographer.
|
2010-01-19
, 17:17
|
Posts: 540 |
Thanked: 288 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
|
#8
|
While nothing to sneeze at, I agree, how much of a quality gain to you expect from the cam? I mean, considering the optics, sensor size, etc, not THAT much is lost in JPEG compression.
|
2010-01-19
, 17:22
|
Posts: 5 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Paris, France
|
#9
|
|
2010-01-19
, 17:25
|
Posts: 356 |
Thanked: 231 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
|
#10
|
While nothing to sneeze at, I agree, how much of a quality gain to you expect from the cam? I mean, considering the optics, sensor size, etc, not THAT much is lost in JPEG compression.
I'm rather new to Linux development, but I am experienced in close-to-the-hardware development, particularly when it comes to TI platforms.
- is this functionality exposed yet in GStreamer (or any plug-in) ? I looked at camerabin and digicam but didn't find anything. Any relevant link appreciated.
- do I have to write a GStreamer plugin myself ? is this something that can be done at the user level or kernel level ?
- if I need to make a plug-in, I could somebody point me to how I could do that using ESBox ? there are not many links about how to use it to build GStreamer and plug-ins
- ideally, I'd prefer doing all this in python rather than C, is that possible at all ? Are camerabin and other plug-ins exposed through Python bindings ?
Thanks all.