It took me a couple of tries to find a cheap USB-HDMI capture device that is both (1) well supported in Linux/OBS and (2) legitimately captures 60fps at 1080p. I ended up with the Elekliv E60, and I am happy with it despite having to plug and unplug the USB cable every now and then when it gets confused and needs reset. Whether or not it will work with this VGA-HDMI converter I do not know. Assuming that the adapter upscales to a relatively standard resolution I would think it would be fine (the E60 supports 640x480, 720x480, 720x576, 800x600, 1024x768, 1280x720, 1280x1024, 600x1200, 1920x1080). But if it's passing the low resolutions straight through, then I dunno.Keep in mind that OBS Studio--at least for me--has always been incredibly finicky when connecting to some video inputs. When I first started using OBS a couple years ago for making Zoom calls more fun, this was incredibly frustrating, as there was every reason it should have been seeing the video input, but it wasn't. Then I rebooted and it worked. So when this happens to you, restart the modern computer running OBS, and the video input should show up without any problem after that. Except that you often have to reboot every time you open OBS, to see that same video input.
Assuming that the adapter upscales to a relatively standard resolution I would think it would be fine (the E60 supports 640x480, 720x480, 720x576, 800x600, 1024x768, 1280x720, 1280x1024, 600x1200, 1920x1080). But if it's passing the low resolutions straight through, then I dunno.
It's not an issue to get much higher quality if you are ready to spend 200 bucks or even more. Also, that is a PCI Express card. This whole thread is about using external USB devices and staying cheap...hauppauge colossus 2 and a vga to component transcoder (with audio so it syncs). Will get WAY better image quality.
I'm glad I found this forum! I'm a vintage gamer myself (Ataris mostly).
Anyway, I stream vinyl with a vintage video game slant. I have a web cam on me, one on my turntable, and one on my vintage gear in the background. But since I only have one turntable, I play a record, then an MP3 from my old Asus EEE netbook. Those are my 2 audio sources fed into a mixer. You can see my layout in the image (attached). All is well and good. But what I'd like to do is add another video source - the VGA output from my netbook so I can stream the Winamp window, as well. I don't think the solution in this thread is what I need, though.
tl;dr
How can I convert from a VGA output to USB male so a modern computer will recognize the signal as video (or a webcam source, so to speak)?
Not quite. You can do analogue over DVI as well, so long as your cable has that cross-shaped set of large pins at one edge of the connector.Here’s a good video I found in that explains a lot. For starters, VGA is the only computer video format that is analog (unless you count RCA composite video). MDA (monochrome), CGA, EGA, DVI, and HDMI are all digital.
Well, so the spec says. But it's very rare for any USB port to supply less than 1000 mA (or even 1.5 A), and I would not be surprised at all if a lot of devices that need more than 500 mA simply draw it anyway.Very unlikely. It's an USB 2.0 device. These are limited to 500 mA. It can not get more and not require more.