home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!usc!cs.utexas.edu!torn!maccs!mcshub!csx.cciw.ca!u009
- From: u009@csx.cciw.ca (G. Stewart Beal)
- Subject: Re: imaging systems wanted
- Organization: Canada Centre for Inland Waters
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 16:29:06 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.162906.28436@csx.cciw.ca>
- References: <1992Nov18.082843.26065@eng.ufl.edu> <8708@lee.SEAS.UCLA.EDU>
- Lines: 24
-
- In article <8708@lee.SEAS.UCLA.EDU> annette@curtiss.seas.ucla.edu (Annette K. Nasif) writes:
- >
- > Hello, I am looking for information about a camera (still-life, not
- >video) that can digitalize a picture and then have that image transmitted
- >to a receiver. A name of a company or manufacturer that carries digital
- >cameras would be especially helpful, but I would deeply appreciate anything
- >you know. Thanks! Annette
- > annette@seas.ucla.edu
- >
- I don't know if Robot Research is still developing for the consumer field,
- but they have (had) a unit called the R1200C Color Slow Scan TV Converter.
- It takes standard NTSC color video, frame grabs on command, then transmits
- the data as a bunch of warbling audio tones (suitable for phone or radio
- use). The technology is quite advanced now in the Amateur Radio community.
- If you want further info on SSTV, email me.
-
- Regards, Stu Beal, VE3MWM, U009@CS.CCIW.CA,
- National Water Research Institute, Burlington, Ontario, Canada.
-
- "A blockbuster, a towering - no more than that, an overtowering novel
- that has all the ingredients (well, some of them) of great fiction."
-
-
-
-