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author | Hans Ulrich Niedermann <gp@n-dimensional.de> | 2006-10-07 13:52:32 +0000 |
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committer | Hans Ulrich Niedermann <gp@n-dimensional.de> | 2006-10-07 13:52:32 +0000 |
commit | be5731e6f052471434b712a2c156a9b2f0d3750d (patch) | |
tree | 6757937daf1e652606b6f26e96f254c38de7d8bf /camlibs/mars/README.mars | |
parent | 5b3835031d2e088f6dc17252220996b53e954f63 (diff) | |
download | libgphoto2-be5731e6f052471434b712a2c156a9b2f0d3750d.tar.gz |
camlib README files: rename, ship in dist tarball, install as doc
git-svn-id: https://svn.code.sf.net/p/gphoto/code/trunk/libgphoto2@9296 67ed7778-7388-44ab-90cf-0a291f65f57c
Diffstat (limited to 'camlibs/mars/README.mars')
-rw-r--r-- | camlibs/mars/README.mars | 186 |
1 files changed, 186 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/camlibs/mars/README.mars b/camlibs/mars/README.mars new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b3bc221a1 --- /dev/null +++ b/camlibs/mars/README.mars @@ -0,0 +1,186 @@ +MARS MR97310 STILLCAM DRIVER +Copyright Theodore Kilgore <kilgota@auburn.edu> April, 2004. This README +revised August 27, 2006. + +(Everything in libgphoto2/camlibs/mars is LGPL-licensed, including this README; +see any of the source files for a more complete statement of the license.) + +INTRODUCTION + +This driver is for a camera which uses the Mars MR97310 chip. I understand +that there are several of these. Mine is an Aiptek PenCam VGA+ (Vendor:Product +ID 0x08ca:0x0111). The interface is proprietary, and these cameras are +supported commercially only in Windows. + +FEATURES OF THE CAMERAS + +The first MR97310 camera which I encountered was the Aiptek PenCam VGA+, +a "budget" camera with resolution settings of 640x480 and 320x240. +This camera and the other MR97310 cameras can also be used as webcams +(not supportable here; would require a kernel module) or to make a "video +clip." Some of the other cameras automatically will run in compressed mode +when shooting clips, but on the Aiptek it is optional to compress clips. +Clips download nicely on all these cameras as a succession of PPM files. +The compression method (optional for the Aiptek camera) is proprietary and +not obvious. With recent progress, it ought to be usable. However, the +adventurous and persistent are hereby encouraged to play with it some more. + +09/12/05: Decompression sort of works, now. Thanks to Bertrik Sikkens +for the basic algorithm, and to Michel Xhaard for testing my additional tweaks. +With some of the cameras it is possible now to get decent photos in compressed +mode, at least some of the time. For this, the camera seems to function best +at outdoor use. + +Update 08/28/06: Decompression algorithm much improved, after much trial +and error. I would say it is now somewhere between 90% to 100% good now. Seems +to work almost perfectly outdoors and in strong light. Works even better at low +resolution settings, that is, 352x288 or lower. + +The camera uses a configuration "block," as do the sq905 cameras. However, +here the information can be used to run options such as gphoto2 -p 3 and +gphoto2 -p 3-5. The OEM software provided with the various cameras does not +take advantage even of the mentioned abilities. With the OEM driver, one has +the choice either to download all photos, or none. If all are downloaded, then +thumbnails are created. The user can then do previews and decide what to save. + + +STATUS NOTES ON SUPPORTED CAMERAS (7 Feb. 2006, revised 28 Aug. 2006) + +First, a special note: On many of these cameras, the LED will read "PC" when +the camera is hooked to a live USB connector. It seems locked in this position. +But all of the cameras which do this, which I have tested, will come up with +all of the other camera button commands if one runs any gphoto2 option which +accesses the camera. Consequently, one can use the camera thus tethered, +without any battery in it, to shoot and download photos. The photos will die +soon if the camera is unhooked without a good battery in it, though, because +the camera uses volatile memory for its data storage. + +The only problem with using any of these cameras is the compression codec. +Bertrik's decompression algorithm seems basically correct, but it has a problem +with leaving diagonal color artifacts, a problem which can be severe in bad +lighting conditions, especially if there are lots of dark colors in the photo. +Those cameras with 352x288 max resolution instead of 640x480 do better, and the +Argus DC-1620 does better in poor light than does the Aiptek Pencam VGA+. +I have recently been able to alleviate these problems to a great extent, but +not completely. Also, not all of the cameras seem to perform equally well +in compressed mode when used to shoot similar photos under similar lighting +conditions. After the tweaks I have added as of August 2006, though, the +situation with compression mode is improved quite a bit. + +Here is a report on the cameras which I own. I can not say anything +about the others unless their performance in compressed mode is reported to me: + +Aiptek Pencam VGA+: Compressed mode is very sensitive to bad lighting, +especially when there are dark colors in the image (08/27/06: better now). +The camera also will refuse to shoot both in compressed and in uncompressed +mode if the light is very bad (indoors, in the evening) and that is probably +all for the best. + +Argus DC-1620: Compressed mode only. No uncompressed photos. The compressed +mode works pretty well, though. Outdoor photos are pretty good, and if you are +willing to put up with a cheap, compressed-mode-only camera it might even be +worth your money. The camera does have some problems in bad light, but not so +severe as with the Aiptek Pencam VGA+. Camera does have a flash-light which can +be turned on in bad light. The camera will then decide if it wants to use it. + +Sakar Digital #77379: Also compressed mode only. Seems to work pretty well. Has +a very high cutoff threshold and will not take photos in the evening, even if +one points it at a bright monitor screen. Color mapping is cruddy, though, even +running in uncompressed mode. + +Philips Keychain and INNOVAGE Mini Digital: These seem to be clones, even +having very similar cases. They will do max resolution 352x488. But for what +they are they work very well. It seems that these shoot clips in compressed +mode (no matter if you otherwise turned compression on, or not), but at the +resolution settings these cameras use the decompression works nicely, too. + +Argus QuickClix: Compressed mode only. The compression algorithm is different +from the compression algorithm in the other known Mars cameras, too. I have +no idea how the compression algorithm works, either. Thus, this camera is a +paperweight unless someone figures out how to decompress the data. Don't buy +one unless you are adventurous, patient, and want to help out. That's why it +is listed as DEPRECATED. + +SPECIFIC WARNING REGARDING ARGUS QUICKCLIX + +For the Mars cameras, all data for raw photos begins with a signature. The +uncompressed photos begin with FF FF 00 FF 96 64 00, and raw photos using the +compression which is solved begin with FF FF 00 FF 96 64 50. If you get a +camera in which the raw data begins with the signature FF FF 00 FF 96 64 20 +then your camera uses the same compression algorithm as the Argus QuickClix. +That compression method is as yet unknown; a camera using it is a paperweight. + +Finally, one can not distinguish an Argus QuickClix from an Argus DC-1620 by +appearance. From the outside they are identical. Also they and several other +cameras use the same USB Vendor:Product number and do not give any +identification string after they are connected, either. So, unless the new +compression algorithm is unlocked, there is a real problem here. + + +USABILITY OF DRIVER WITH GUI FRONTENDS + +The camera library presented here seems to work with gtkam as a frontend. To +use gtkam for the first time with any camera, you must choose the camera. +For this purpose, after starting gtkam click on "Camera." Then choose +"Add Camera." Then "Detect." Click on the name of the camera to get photos. +Gtkam creates its own thumbnails for cameras which do not offer them. These +cameras do not offer thumbnails. + +Digikam as a frontend works, too. But for some reason +digikam seems unable to display thumbnails from this camera. Anyone who knows +what the problem is here, please let me know. + +Flphoto works well, too, with no obvious glitches. Flphoto is also willing to +create thumbnails and does so without any tweaking. + + +SAVING RAW FILES AND USING THEM LATER (09-23-06) + +All raw photos downloaded from the camera come with a signature and a header +which is 12 bytes in length. This header has always been retained if the +photo is saved in raw format. The last few of the bytes in this header seem to +pertain to things like brightness and color balance (not usable information, +at this time, but may be in the future). The first bytes are always + +FF FF 00 FF 96 64 + +and the next byte (as received from the camera) is either 00 (if the image is +uncompressed) or is 50 if the image has been subjected to the "standard" +MR97310 compression or is 20 if the image has been subjected to the totally +unknown Argus QuickClix compression. + +Thus the header of any given image as it comes from the camera tells us in +byte 6 of the header whether the image is compressed or if compressed then +which algorithm has been used. That information uses the most significant nibble +of the "compression" byte. But if we do not do something, the pixel dimension of +the photo to be obtained from the raw file is not recorded. As the camera also +codes this information in one nibble, we place that nibble here, too: + +Original raw signature pixel dim. Saved as Comp. +FF FF 00 FF 96 64 00 176x144 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 00 no + 352x288 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 02 no + 320x240 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 06 no + 640x480 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 08 no +FF FF 00 FF 96 64 50 176x144 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 50 yes + 352x288 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 52 yes + 320x240 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 56 yes + 640x480 FF FF 00 FF 96 64 58 yes + +(similar will happen if compression code is the bad 0x20, as well) + +With this small change, the raw file now contains all information within +itself that is needed for processing it. + + +FURTHER DETAILS + +Further details are given in "protocol.txt". These details have been obtained +through trial and error and are intended solely to meet the problems of +compatibility in other than a Microsoft Windows (trademark) environment. + +WARRANTY? + +Absolutely none. Remember, I did not sell you this software. I have written +this driver for my own edification and in the sincere hope that it might help +you to use of your camera. Please see also the warranty clauses +in the LGPL license.
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