Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!gem.mps.ohio-state.edu!apple!sun-barr!lll-winken!arisia!sgi!shinobu!odin!ramoth.esd.sgi.com!msc From: msc@ramoth.esd.sgi.com (Mark Callow) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi Subject: Re: Transfer Personal IRIS images to VCR Message-ID: <1523@odin.SGI.COM> Date: 18 Nov 89 03:38:53 GMT References: <8911131633.AA13927@aero4.larc.nasa.gov> Sender: news@odin.SGI.COM Reply-To: msc@sgi.com Organization: Silicon Graphics Inc., Entry Systems Division Lines: 18 In article <8911131633.AA13927@aero4.larc.nasa.gov>, blbates@AERO4.LARC.NASA.GOV ("Brent L. Bates AAD/TAB MS294 x42854") writes: > > There are several companies out there that sell devices that connect to > the RGB output of your computer and then connect to your video tape recorder. > However, all the ones I have seen record "live" that is what every is drawn > on the screen however fast or slow that is that is the way it gets recorded. > That is what I have heard about, if there is anything else out there I > would like to know about it. You don't need any other type of converter. You need an animation controller and a single frame VTR. Display the frame, record it, and move to the next one. -- From the TARDIS of Mark Callow msc@ramoth.sgi.com, ...{ames,decwrl}!sgi!msc "There is much virtue in a window. It is to a human being as a frame is to a painting, as a proscenium to a play. It strongly defines its content."