System Namenatr0n-PCProcessor2600K @ 4.4GHz / Dual Xeon 5675's @ 3.33GHz 12c/24tMotherboardSabertooth Z77 / GA-7TESMCoolingDeepcool Assassin - 3 Fans / CustomMemory2x8GB 2133MHz Samsung Dual Channel / 6x4GB 1333MHz Samsung Hexa ChannelVideo Card(s)Evga GTX 980 SC / Asus Strix 980tiStorageVarious SSD/HDDisplay(s)Samsung 23' 2048x1152 / Various DellsCaseSunbeam Transformer Silver / Matrexx 55Audio Device(s)SB X-fi on all systemsPower SupplyCorsair TX 650w / Evga NEX 750BMouseAlienware AW558 @ 5000 DPIKeyboardAsus KB34211SoftwareXP64/7/8.1/10Benchmark Scoreshttp://valid.x86.fr/79kuh6. That's always a good option However, I am concerned about the hardware. Everything in me says that the links Robert and I provided should work. The fact that it's not, indicates to me that there's a problem upstream. Either the device has failed, the cable is bad, something else.
Do you have any way to hook it to another computer just to see if it tries to load drivers? If it does, I'd be manually pointing it at the drivers on the disc and saying 'I know you don't believe me, but this really is what I have!' I believe is on the trail of the fox.Seems the USB driver may not work in Windows 8, 8.1, or 10 after scouring the forums across the Interwebz.That Tasco microscope was made by a company called in China. Openwrt serial port programming hardware. Just a bit of info, here.However, all may not be lost. I don't have one to test with to see if these options posted in this thread I found work or not.
But, if, you are on WIndows 8, 8.1 or 10, then, you may want to try them.The post I am quoting is a good starting point, possibly. Others were having trouble with.net and such. Some said that the software works, but the USB driver won't work.A couple found different software work arounds.Quote from BleepingComputer,. How to use USB Microscope previously OK on PC with Windows XP, 7, 8 but not working on a PC running Windows 10 ( say after update)I too had problems with a USB microscope previously running perfectly on 2 computers I have - one running XP and the other running Windows 7When I updated the Windows 7 computer to Windows 10 with the free update the microscope failed to work ( still OK on the XP computer)I tried the work-arounds mentioned previously on this forum with no success.I found a simple answer on the Microsoft help website - Windows 10 has a dedicated camera app and this worked for me.
The app can be accessed on a Windows 10 computer as follows-Connect the USB microscope to the computer as usual.In 'Search Windows' ( just to the right of START icon on the bottom bar ) enter Camera.Usually the first (top) result will be the dedicated camera app (may see it as Camera- Trusted Windows Store App)Click on this and hey presto you should see an image from your microscope and be able to take a photo. That's always a good option However, I am concerned about the hardware. Everything in me says that the links Robert and I provided should work. The fact that it's not, indicates to me that there's a problem upstream. Either the device has failed, the cable is bad, something else.
Do you have any way to hook it to another computer just to see if it tries to load drivers? If it does, I'd be manually pointing it at the drivers on the disc and saying 'I know you don't believe me, but this really is what I have!'
![]()
I recently bought a USB microscope/camera and Windows 10 is causing me some headaches.I can't say for certain where the problem lies, but it seems to be how Windows is treating the camera, seemingly as if it's a front-facing webcam.It's a 5MP camera, so firstly I should be getting a resolution of 2560 x 1960, yet the stock Camera app and nearly every other piece of software I have tried is limited to 2048 x 1536. I'd probably be able to get over this, except whenever I use the stockCamera app, or anything else I've tried, it seems to zoom in and/or cut off some of the picture? I'm not sure.The software that came with the microscope gives the full resolution and field of view, but unfortunately it is generally awful software. A few other freeware apps also manage the full res, but have the same issues as the software that came with the camera.YouCam etc.
Rohs Digital Microscope Driver
All has the same problems that the stock Camera app does.Basically, I want Windows to recognise that the device is capable of higher resolutions and stop cropping/zooming/whatever it is doing. How can I effect these changes?edit: I was testing settings in YouCam, which lets me change the resolution (but is still capped for whatever reason) and I discovered if I set the resolution to 640 x 480 it gives me the full field of view, or doesn't crop it, or whatever it's doing.
Cooling Tech Microscope Software Download
Forsome reason setting it to a higher capture resolution chops off a decent part of the picture, which is unacceptable. I checked both the manufacturer's website as well as the disc that came with the microscope, neither have anything other than the lacklustre camera software (which does allow he to use the full resolution and field of view, but its photo capture and imagingcapabilities are so ridiculously barebones, no noise reduction for example). The device seems to rely on generic drivers, which is annoying. But since the camera software recognises that the camera is capable of 5MP, and gets the full field when at full resthere doesn't seem to be any technical reason why other, better software shouldn't be able to do the same.
Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |