fryke said:Well, I don't think it's gonna happen. There's plenty of 'good enough' video chat hard- and software on the Windows side. Most of the software you get for free, and most of the hardware's cheaper. So I don't think the market's _that_ big for Apple. If they do it, however, I think they'd almost _have_ to add USB2 to the connection options in order to maximise the ease-of-access.
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The iSight is plugged in. Windows cannot find a driver for it, but it is happy enough to use the generic 1394 driver. Fine, I can deal with that. However, you view the image and its brightness is off the scale. This could be a major problem.
Monsieur Google didnt throw up much help. Against my better judgement I logged-out of my MSN transport on Psi to log-in to MSN Messenger; luckily there are some controls in there for your cam. Down came the brightness, a little tweak with the saturation and we were away it works in Messenger. Close that down and go back to the Generic 1394 Desktop Camera w00t! The settings stick.
So there you have itif you want to use an iSight in Windows (XP at least), you can, well, for video at least. Out of the box it isnt too great, but using Messenger once will make those settings stick.
(If youre that opposed to using Messenger, or want a little more control, there are several other programs that do the job. The one I tried out was IC Capture which is primarily a tool for saving images and videos from your camera, but also lets you tweak the settings of the iSight.
texanpenguin said:I use my Sony Handicam for a Webcam, and it works perfectly well in Yahoo!
I don't think iChat has anything to offer PC users. I think PC users are already used to having a far better IM selection; MSN Messenger 7, though outrageously bloated and ugly, has everything (and more) that iChat does. iChat is a nice ADDITION to the OS, but it couldn't sell iSights on its own. I don't even use it, and I'm a heavy AV user as far as chat goes. If iChat would let through connections that weren't broadband, then I'd use it. If it connected to MSN or Yahoo! networks, I'd use it.
It doesn't. There are so many good programs that do it all on the PC, Yahoo! Messenger on the PC is even MORE pronouncedly better on the PC than MSN is (on the Mac it seems like it's been compiled for OS 9).
The only thing that iChat is better for is AIM, and it's a dying network.