Thread: Tablet device with HDMI input
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07-23-2011 01:21 AM
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09-03-2011 12:08 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnxvFYza6Y4
I think if you can do this with galaxy phone is no problem to do with galaxy tab or another android device. The question is how high resolution you have via usb. I think is the same thing as connecting to pc with eos utility.
Mateusz
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11-21-2011 11:05 AM
Until there is a tablet w HDMI input, look to portable HDMI monitors for inexpensive displays for video/dSLR and similar applications.
Unfortunately it will not do double duty as a tablet and it may be a bit bulkier and somewhat lower resolution (1024 x 600). Worst of all
you need to supply portable power.
http://www.dhgate.com/10-1-led-tft-l...aa4c42eb2.html
If you search a bit more you can even find something quite a bit better sounding:
Cheaper
http://www.dhgate.com/10-1-usb-lcd-t...d9eff050b.html
I have not purchased anything from this vendor so I have no idea about reliability of vendor or products. I'm just helping with the search.Last edited by drdancm; 11-21-2011 at 11:17 AM. Reason: correction
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11-21-2011 11:48 AM
I think, as mentioned, that the return on investment of having an HDMI input of a tablet is just not going to get manufacturers to add it. Our use would be so minimal compared to the target market these devices are intended for. Because of that, and as said it would require dedicated hardware to do so, you are likely not going to see it as a hardware connection anytime soon.
Not that I can't see people using them as portable displays for other hardware, like a game system, or bluRay player, but again, given people are chasing Apple, you can be GUARANTEED that Apple isn't going to add that. They want your game playing and video watching on their own software.
I have searched HIGH and LOW for this capability myself. I was a developer of Iphone apps even for a short time and I looked into it from a hardware perspective. As Rob says, the backbone isn't there.
The next question becomes, can an external device do this? That's depends on the bandwidth of the port connection and that I am not sure. Input bandwidth != output bandwidth, totally separate.
Even if it was USB only, the processing power of a software solution would KILL the battery to get it in the camera. That's a lot of power. And, have you used a USB display adapter? I have one. Moving video at 1920x1080 kills the performance of a quad core i7 2.2Ghz machine and is really choppy. The cost of that hardware to drive that is going to make something like the DP6 seem like a lot better deal.
There is quite a bit of precedence that wireless is where it is at. The new Canon C300 has an option for controlling/monitoring the C300 over a webbrowser on a wireless device. Further, Red showed their wireless monitoring on an iPad last year that isn't available yet. I've even seen wireless monitoring solutions for a company that I do beta testing for that stopped working on it because the market wasn't there for it.
I think all of us looking for a solution is a good thing, and I'd LOVE to use my iDevices as well. Maybe someone will just throw this feature in to differentiate themselves from everyone else. But, I wouldn't get my hopes up too much. We are a niche market, and therefore, other features would be their target since they'd get more traction with them.
That said, man, I would LOVE to monitor with the display on the iPhone4. It's SO crisp!!! Hopefully LG who makes the display will get it into cameras at some point!!formerly know as grimepoch.
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04-26-2012 05:26 PM
I think the innovations like this are going to come from the open source hardware community (eventually). Take a look at the apertus project and their monitor/viewfinder page: http://apertus.org/en/viewfinder
(and remember, our aim to is monitor, not record over these wimpy connections -- we can probably use WiFi to get a good enough signal for aim and framing and focusing, but it will never be a good enough signal for capture)
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04-26-2012 07:18 PM
This thing uses USB, but it a bit closer to the ideal way to do this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRWNLSmW3MU
THE big drawback will be the speed. There is just no way that it will be able to show the signal with a low enough latency to be usable for real-time shooting. It will always lag behind the action.
It will be low framerate (15 fps), and probably lag behind what the camera is seeing/recording by about a quarter of a second.
Another look here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vEeRUFEC4tc
It looks like it will with with practically any Canon EOS model made in the past 4-6 years.
The software developer's website is here: http://dslrcontroller.com/
(It certainly looks like it is good enough to set up crane shots, for example)
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09-29-2012 10:34 AM
I just bought a DP6 but am still looking for a cheaper solution. Has anyone looked at car DVD monitors?
http://www.chinavasion.com/china/who...en_Car_Monitor
You'd still have to overcome portable power but there are power solutions out there like the PB70 from switronix.
Not a tablet, but still cheaper than a DP6 bundle... If it works, which I don't know for sure! Any thoughts?






