![]() ![]() The NT1004 most notably added the capability to simultaneously stream video, audio and serial data (IR remote control data, smart media card and other standard serial data) across a USB interface to a computer, and hence broadened the range of devices for which the USBVision was suitable. This successor product was labeled by Nogatech as the USBvision II (or USBVision II) chipset. The NT1004 became available a year later, in late 1999. The NT1003 was intended for use in digital video cameras where in such use, the chip's algorithms provide compression of the raw 30fps video data down to data rates between the ranges of 0.5 Mbit to 8 Mbit, and thus permit the transmission of a video stream across the narrow bandwidth of an USB 1.1 channel. By the eventual time of product availability, in late 1998, it had subsequently become known more simply as the USBVision (or USBvision). However, that label soon disappeared from company use and the chip was rebranded as the USB-Vision. When literature on the product emerged in 1997, the NT1003 was originally referred to as the Live Video On USB chip. The NT1003 was the first chip in this family. ![]() (Note: in actuality, Nogatech was very inconsistent in respect to their usage of either a "V" or "v" in their references to the product's name, so "USBvision" was also commonly presented). -1376,12 1376,9 static int stk_camera_probe(struct usb_interface *interface,Įndpoint =
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