In general, there are a few things you can do to optimize video capture performance.
The Power Macintosh G3 minitower with the Audio/Video card can support up to 320- by 240-pixel video capture at 30 frames per second. This rate is for capturing video only. This rate decreases if both audio and video are captured simultaneously.
Most video capture applications use standard QuickTime Video and Audio settings. How you set these settings can affect the performance of video capture significantly. The PowerMac G3 Read Me included every Power Macintosh G3 computer states:
Video capture is available on Power Macintosh G3 computers with video input and output ports.
System Configuration:
Extensions Manager Settings:
Load only the following control panels at startup:
Load only the following extensions at startup:
Memory Settings set in the Memory control panel:
AppleTalk Settings:
Monitors & Sounds Settings:
Sample Capture Settings for Video Capture Application
Not all settings below are available in Apple Video Player.
Video Capture Window location:
Place the video capture window in the lower right corner of the screen. Video capture performance is optimized when the video capture window is outside the rect 0,0,320,240.
Audio Input Settings:
Video Input Settings:
Component:
Video Depth:
Color Quality: High (75) Frames per second: 29.97 (29.97 fps is the actual NTSC standard)
Mac OS 8.5 Video Capture Enhancements
The video capturing software for both Power Macintosh G3 and PowerBook G3 Series computers has been significantly enhanced for Mac OS 8.5. In addition two compression settings now directly support capturing. These are the Component Video and Photo-JPEG compressors.
Figure 1 Video settings (compression settings shown)
At quality settings of Medium or less, full rate captures (29.97 frames/second for NTSC, 25 frames/second PAL and SECAM) can be achieved for capture sizes of 320 x 240 or less.
Additionally, under Mac OS 8.5, video capturing is now more tolerant of other system activity. Full rate captures can now be achieved when using Component Video or Photo - JPEG at 320 x 240 or less, even with AppleTalk enabled, File Sharing active, Virtual Memory enabled, and sound being captured.
Note: 320 x 240 captures using Component Video result in over 4.5 MB/second of data being written to the hard disk. Apple uses hard drives from a wide variety of hard drive vendors, and some hard drives might not be able to sustain that data rate. This results in dropped frames.