Reviewed on: Dell Inspiron laptop, running Windows XP on a 2GHz Pentium 4 processor. The Good: Unbelievably small and light, ideal for travel. The Bad: Picture tends to be a little dark, and requires ...
The Good: Good hardware; external microphone with lapel clip; extremely useful software bundle. The Bad: Has a CMOS sensor rather than a higher-quality CCD sensor; puts fairly large demands on the ...
It’s really hard to turn down the Creative Live! Cam Sync 4K because of its 4K capability for about $50 or so. But it screams “budget webcam!” in some regards. The Creative Live! Cam Sync 4K webcam is ...
New software, new designs and new materials keep Creative WebCams out in front. London; 22 November, 2004: Creative (Nasdaq: CREAF) the worldwide leader in digital entertainment products for the ...
Video calling doesn’t just have to be for the latest mobile phones. Computers have been offering the ability to talk to someone in person for the last ten years, so what makes the latest top of the ...
With the raising popularity of online chat options, webcam use has never been more popular. For those road warriors, a webcam is a link to home. But should you take the Creative Live! Cam Notebook Pro ...
The first affordable web camera with face tracking was the Logitech QuickCam Sphere which I reviewed almost two years ago. It was a pretty decent product, but not as elegant a solution as I’d hoped ...
Creative Labs offers a camera specifically designed for laptops. The Creative WebCam Notebook ($49.99) is the size of a double-A battery and clips onto a laptop screen. It's more expensive than the ...
I have Red Hat 9 and a Creative PD1001 webcam. Red Hat correctly identifies the webcam and it's model. I have the ov511 module loaded. I can't seem to be able to locate the dev file to get it working.