are you thinking of a HD PVR? the two best known PCI-e HD PVR's are the hauppauge colossus and the black magic intensity pro
The Live Gamer HD is acknowledged to be better than both.
The BMIP specifically has more than its fair share of problems.
are you thinking of a HD PVR? the two best known PCI-e HD PVR's are the hauppauge colossus and the black magic intensity pro
The Live Gamer HD is acknowledged to be better than both.
The BMIP specifically has more than its fair share of problems.
+1
I have tried allot of different programs and afterburner captures in 720 and I only seem to lose about 7fps in BF3. If I get something I want to keep, I then compress the files to .mkv file format with a free program called Handbrake.
For local capture - Dxtory.
Nothing compares to it for power and flexability. It makes Fraps look like a toy.
Use Lagarith as a codec with Dxtory and you have near pixel perfect capture with very little overhead compared to some other solutions.
Small sample clip of Battlefield 3 in 1080p to give you an idea of quality, was rendered at ~7Mbit/Sec prior to Youtube receiving it.
i use fraps tried em all .
people getting bad frames have it set wrong .
Hauppauge HD PVR Gaming Edition.
Edit: http://www.hauppauge.co.uk/site/products/data_hdpvr-gaming.html
So which is the best for a lowend system hoping to upload to youtube in 720p? Fraps I currently use though certainly wouldn't say I don't have FPS issues
23:40 onwards for example on this video of mine;
Fraps works fine, but sometimes a single HDD is too slow for 1080p @ 30fps. Most games record fine, but something like Crysis (with all its foilage) just overwhelms my HDD and the recording becomes choppy. Changing to a different HDD to the one the game is installed on helps a little, but it's still choppy.
I know its the HDD, because when I switch to my SSD it's totally smooth, but having only 170gb free on my SSD isn't exactly ideal and I don't like writing massive amounts of data to it anyway.
I think for best performance from FRAPs, a raid-0 HDD array would be ideal as the high sequential writes would be ideal for video capture. The other option is to drop to a lower res (e.g. 720p) or possibly a lower frame rate (24fps still looks good with certain games).

Raid-0 only improves the sequential reads though doesn't it?
Nope.
I run RAID-0 across 2 drives, both read and write speeds are as good as doubled compared to a single of those drive.
Different RAID levels have different performance increases in the read/write areas but a stripe will accelerate both reading and writing, RAID-0 is fake-raid (no redundancy) and no parity/mirror is written. RAID-1 (Mirror) for example has no write speed benefit but can provide a read benefit.

Games from the 90s early 2000s.
Not seen demo record feature in many moderns game. In-fact, I cannot remember the last time I even used it outside of the half Life engine. I miss the feature but to be honest it was flakey at best and rarely 100% accurate to what actually happened.

