Imillet HDMI Video Capture with USB3.0/2.0 Dongle 1080P 60FPS Drive-Free Capture Card Box for Windows Linux Os X System
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| Compatible Devices | pc |
| Connector Type | HDMI |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 3.8 x 0.6 x 2.2 inches |
| Brand | IMILLET |
| Finish Type | Hdmi |
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Product information
| Product Dimensions | 3.8 x 0.6 x 2.2 inches |
|---|---|
| Item Weight | 4 ounces |
| Manufacturer | Imillet |
| ASIN | B01M64EAX6 |
| Item model number | IM-VCC-001 |
| Customer Reviews |
3.6 out of 5 stars |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | October 15, 2016 |
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Product guides and documents
Product Description
b>Features:
Host Interface: USB3.0, 300-350MB/s, USB2.0, 40MB/s
Input Interface: HDMI interface
Input Formats:480p to 1080p
Output Resolutions: 640x480P to 1024x576
Frame Rate:25/29.97/30/50/59.94/60 fps
Audio and Video capture:standards of UVC and UAC
Size: 98x56x16 (L/W/H, mm)
Power consumption: 2.5W
Working Temperature: 0-50 deg C
Storage Temperature: -20-70 deg C
General Problems and solution:
(1)Connection problems
(2)Capture software problems
(3)Computer configuration problems
(4)Video source problem
Detailed solutions on manual. The solutions are easy even to green hand for capturing. Imillet devoted to crystal capture signal with easiest setting. If there is any problem to capture, PLS contact DaFang customer service or download the detailed mannual on this page for help. Thank you for supporting Imillet.
Connect and Function: 1.Connect the signal sources such as Blu-Ray Player, Play Station, audio/video receiver, statellite receivers with HDMI output interfaces with a HDMI cable to the device HDMI input 2. Insert the USB 3.0 cable head to USB3.0 interface, the opposite aspect of the cable into your pc’s USB 3.0 interface. 3. HDMI to USB 3.0 Vedio Capture Dongle is according to UVC (USB video elegance), UAC (USB audio elegance) STANDARD, with no need to put in drivers and settings. After installation in operating system, the relevant video and ausio devices will probably be added on. In windows, for instance, can have new symbol device:
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Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers like the quality, ease of use, and value of the adapter. For example, they mention it works well for full HD video and audio capture on Mac, it's easy to connect and power via USB 3.0 port, and it'll output up to 1080p. That said, opinions are mixed on performance, and temperature.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers like the quality of the adapter. They say it works well for Full HD video and audio capture on Mac, and produces decent footage. Some say the video input is just as good as or better than their PCI express video input card. Overall, most are satisfied with the quality and functionality of the product.
"This works very well for my use case. I needed a way to use a laptop like a computer monitor for other computers, and this works perfectly...." Read more
"...It works practically flawlessly, it's plug and play, and works with all of my devices so far...." Read more
"...linux to see if that allowed 720p ot 1080i playback, I lost the video stream altogether in linux; interestingly, I could get video in windows, but..." Read more
"These things are basically usb to hdmi dongles. Fantastically useful for setting up dual streaming, hardly any lag...." Read more
Customers like the ease of use of the adapter. They mention that it works right out of the box, is portable, and has no software installation. Some say that it's a basic product that works well without any drivers.
"...This works EXACTLY like the Magewell, it's plug and play, and I don't notice anything difference in quality between both devices...." Read more
"...It works perfectly with our iMac. The plug and play works well...." Read more
"...Super solid simple plug and play product. Can output up to 1080p just fine...." Read more
"...Pros:-Price.-Easy to connect-Portable-No Drivers-Powered by USB 3.0 port-No buttons, just plug-in...." Read more
Customers appreciate the value of the adapter. They say it is the best value for HD live streaming.
"...The price for this is great compared to most other devices in this category...." Read more
"...But like I said before this product is amazing, it's half the price of the Magewell and I highly recommend it over the Magewell as long as your..." Read more
"This is by far the best value for HD live streaming. Magewell & Epiphan are the best in class if you can afford those products...." Read more
"I bought it for the price, hoping it performs well. It's the best bang for the buck. I went ahead and bought a spare just in case...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the performance of the adapter. Some mention it works flawlessly, while others say it didn't work at all. Some say it wouldn't even work on the G74SX's single Fresco Logic chipset USB 3.0 port, and that it didn’t work under Windows 10 64 bit.
"...It is small and works great in Linux. When using VLC, there is quite a bit of lag, but with mplayer, I hardly notice the lag...." Read more
"...It worked with all of my camcorders, basically anything I threw at it it worked perfectly fine, but with the iPad it would capture the screen when..." Read more
"...So at this point, it doesn’t really work and even if I can get it to work, it doesn’t appear that it will be any better than the LKV373A for $116..." Read more
"...I picked this item up for about half the cost. It works perfectly with our iMac. The plug and play works well...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the temperature of the adapter. Some mention that it does not run excessively warm, while others say that it became very hot when using it. Some are concerned that the heat will eventually damage the units.
"...as I forgot and left it plugged in for probably a few months, and it does run hot (surprisingly, it worked after this, but not for long)...." Read more
"...The device does not seem to get hot in my use of it, but maybe I do not work it hard enough. Highly recommended!" Read more
"...The plug and play works well. The device gets a little hot but I figure that is normal as I haven't had many interactions with video capture..." Read more
"...It does what it claims, and it doesn't overheat. I've streamed for 12-14 hours non-stop on multiple occasions." Read more
Customers are dissatisfied with the audio quality of the adapter. They mention that the video quality seems worse, the audio is out of sync, and that it needs a 3.5mm audio input.
"...I have not seen sound come through yet, the stream shows no sound in mplayer, but I have little need for sound...." Read more
"...in linux; interestingly, I could get video in windows, but with no audio!..." Read more
"...When I tried to capture playback from the DVR, the sound recorded very poor...." Read more
"Works great, but needs a 3.5mm audio input!..." Read more
Customers are dissatisfied with the capture rate of the adapter. They mention that the lag is a bit much, the sound is out of sync, and the video playback was at very high speed. They also say that it's unable to increase the capture speed past 200 bitrate without signal being dropped.
"...It is small and works great in Linux. When using VLC, there is quite a bit of lag, but with mplayer, I hardly notice the lag...." Read more
"...Overall I am happy with the purchase except I wish the lag was less obviously.It is totally unusable to play games in real time from the card...." Read more
"...Out of sync sound and the video playback was at very high speed...." Read more
"...Unable to increase capture rate past 200 bitrate without signal being dropped. Need to get it higher...." Read more
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So now we have the Imillet, this device gets 4 stars and almost was 5 stars except for 1 problem I ran into. Ok so comparing this to the Magewell, it's half the price which is HUGE. With my computers I do not have the option to add a video capture card to my PC so these are crucial and paying $150 as opposed to $300 is huge, especially when I might have to get more of these in the future. This works EXACTLY like the Magewell, it's plug and play, and I don't notice anything difference in quality between both devices. BUT one major issue I ran into with this device (which is why I'm going to keep my Magewell instead of selling it and getting an additional one of these) is that the Imillet would not work with my iPad no matter what I did with it. It worked with all of my camcorders, basically anything I threw at it it worked perfectly fine, but with the iPad it would capture the screen when I plugged it in, but froze every single time even on 2 different computers running different operating systems (Windows 7, 10).
Hopefully in the future when I replace my iPad with a Droid touchpad it may work with that and then I will have 0 problems with this device, but just be warned that this thing works on the same level as Magewell except for with iPads, and because it doesn't work with iPads there maybe other random devices it doesn't work with. If you need to have multiple video capture devices I would suggest owning just 1 Magewell to work as your backup and have several Imillet's as your workhorses. But like I said before this product is amazing, it's half the price of the Magewell and I highly recommend it over the Magewell as long as your device works with it. I'm holding onto this, but at the same time I'm holding onto my Magewell and if I have to make future purchases it will definitely be this device.
When I go it, I immediately tried it out on the Linux box that I am going to use to store videos and so the disappointment began. First of all, documentation consists of a 3” by 3”, 10 panel (9 excluding cover) of which only 3 cover software. That ONLY covered one program, a WINDOWS ONLY freeware player called “Potplayer” and only covers setting it up for 720p. There was also NO URL in the documentation, nor a CD with additional documentation. O<, same as with the LKV373A but for al lot more money I expected more. Google search turned up nothing but vendors selling it—nothing about using it, although this will probably improve with time.
I did get it to work in 1080p60 in VLC on Linux, but it wasn’t exactly plug and play because I had to fiddle around a bit to find the right audio stream (for the record, video stream was set to /dev/video0 and audio to alsa:hw1,0 on my system). This gave me a jerky video with some sporadic streaking and the wrong aspect ration (4:3). Audio was fine and properly synchronized, but it’s only stereo (same as the LKV373A, but they don’t claim otherwise). Fiddling around, I was able to fix the aspect ratio. I then tried the lowest overhead player I know—ffplayer, which needs to be launched from the command line which means I needed to spend a little time looking through the ffmpeg (of which ffplayer is a part) online documentation—which is massive and quite technical and definitely not noob frendly—to figure out how to express the stream specifiers which I could could retrieve from VLC on the command line (“ffplayer -f v4l -i /dev/video -f alsa -i hw:1,0” my system). The advantage of launching from the command line is you get all sorts of debug output while th program is running, and ffplayer kept complaining of buffer underruns, meaning the program wasn’t receiving as much data as it was expecting—jerky video explained. I ran top and intel_gpu_top to see if there was a resource problem, and there was not—cpu and gpu utilization were lower that with the LKV373A (which delivers mpeg2-ts compressed data that has to be uncompressed before it can be viewed).
It probably would have performed satisfactorily at 720p (it did on windows using Potplayer), but I had no idea how to set it to to—anything really—under Linux becaus—NO DOCUMENTATION! Even when I tried it in windows using Potplayer (on much more powerful hardware, incidentally), I had the same jerky video, and the audio quality seemed worse as well. In the process of experimenting with settings in Potplayer and switching linux to see if that allowed 720p ot 1080i playback, I lost the video stream altogether in linux; interestingly, I could get video in windows, but with no audio! I did my best to set it back to the way it was, but was unable to get both streams working on either platform. So at this point, it doesn’t really work and even if I can get it to work, it doesn’t appear that it will be any better than the LKV373A for $116 less. While the LKV373A is even less well documented for this purpose by the seller (it isn’t intended for video capture, it’s just usable for it) there is some stuff online (blog<dotsy)danman<dotsy>eu) about misusing it precisely the way that I want. It also does pretty good mpeg2 compression in hardware (the downside of that is that you can’t use a more efficient algorithm like h.264 or h.265 without first decompressing it and degrading the quality).
This puppy’s going back and I wait for the LKV373A to come back in stock. This is, at best, just as much a kludge as the LKV373A, only less well documented (albeit, by others) and a lot more expensive. I cannot recommend it even if you’re using windows because of the obvious ease with which it can be screwed up and fact that there is no documentation, configuration software, or customer support to help you fix it. With no website, there is also no possibility firmware upgrades to fix bugs (which may have something to do why mine doesn’t work) or just reflash with the original to restore a broken config.
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