Free Visca Usb Software

This software allows you to control most features inside your HuddleCamHD camera. It utilizes the camera’s VISCA over USB capabilities, giving you a reliable connection for controlling your camera(s) over the same USB cable used for video. Application Feature List. PTZOptics Free IP Control Software We offer a completely free software to control all your networked PTZOptics cameras. We ask that you keep it open source and submit any improvements made to the community. PTZOptics now offers complete, standalone Mac and PC camera control programs! Plus a new Open Broadcaster Software (OBS). USB 2.0 viewer software. Latest USB 2.0 viewer software and drivers for 32bit and 64bit Windows operating systems (not Microsoft Digitally Certified). Software manual. SDK data sheet.NET SDK Descriptor (20/21K1X, 24B1.3X, and 24C1.3X Models Only) SFT-07019-WHQL. Microsoft Certified USB 2.0 viewer software. Our software supports IP, VISCA, and NDI® cameras, offering powerful and precise camera control and automation tools to help streamline your next live production and broadcast. We also offer a wide variety of single and multi-camera USB to VISCA RS-232/RS-422 cable sets to make connecting your VISCA PTZ cameras to your broadcasting equipment. VISCA Camera Control Library for Windows v.1.0 libVISCAWin is a library to control cameras using Sony's VISCA interface in Windows via the serial port. This interface is used to control primarily OEM block cameras and surveillance cameras. VISCA Soney EVI Pan/Tilt/Zoom Camera v.1.0 Aim of this project is to develop a class library for RS232 signaling control of Sony EVI.

PTZ Controller software makes it much more easier to control PTZ camera.

Features

  • Work with multiple PTZ camera protocols to control Pan, Tilt, Zoom, Focus, Iris, Auto Scan, Preset, and so on
  • Support protocols for Pelco D, Pelco P, Sony VISCA, AD, Bosch, Panasonic WV/AW, Samsung, LG, LiLin, Canon, and Hitachi
  • Control multiple PTZ cameras on one computer
  • Support PTZ cameras connected via COM Port or Ethernet Port
  • Auto and Manual control for camera Focus and Iris
  • Support multiple Auto Scan tracks, including preset position scan and auto pan
  • Support USB Joystick, Gamepad, and Xbox 360
  • Run as PTZ Controller server
  • Control PTZ camera remotely by HTTP request

Control Demo

Free Visca Usb Software

Our stake center was just upgraded to the new HD distribution system and we finally have a PTZ camera mounted on the back wall of the chapel. The person who adjusted the system and trained us said there was a free Visca control software package for controlling the camera (via USB->RS232->PTZ camera) but the packages I found were either free and supported IP cameras only (no Ethernet on this camera) or cost almost as much as a Visca hardware joystick controller ($300+).

Free Visca Usb Software Free

Free visca usb software windows 10
For anyone interested, I've put together (very early 'pre-alpha' quality, written in Golang, so it should compile for Mac, Windows, and Linux) PTZ control program that accepts input from a USB game pad joystick controller (a cheap clone of the XBox controller on Amazon) and connects via USB (in the video rack) to the camera.
One joystick ('hat') controls pan and tilt, the other controls zoom and focus. The other dozen-or-so buttons are not yet used, but could be. It takes advantage of all the variable zoom speeds supported by the Visca protocol, so it is pretty easy to move very smoothly, including panning and tilting while zooming. I'm running it on a Raspberry Pi with a touchscreen, though it's just a command-line application right now.
Anyone interested in trying it out? I plan to open-source it, and I'd like to add a few more features like:
GUI with preset buttons for specific shots (wide, tall/medium/short pulpit, choir, organist, pianist, chorister) and maybe even an 'automatic choir' mode that slowly pans across the choir slowly, perhaps with a 'choir men' and 'choir women' button as well. I thought it would be even cooler to add an Arduino under the pulpit with a laser rangefinder module (I think they are about $15 or so) to send the pulpit height back to the Pi eventually, to support a 'pulpit auto-height' mode as well.
Anyone out there feeling really adventurous that wants to try it out soon? Our conference is in about 10 days so I hope to add several more features in time to use them in a real stream.