Pinnacle PCTV Analogue Pro PCI - 8230-10006-61 - SaverSoftware

Pinnacle PCTV Analogue Pro PCI

Manufacturer - PINNACLE SYSTEMS

Price £ 49.99    (£ 42.54 exc. VAT )


PINNACLE SYSTEMS - Pinnacle PCTV Analogue Pro PCI

Description

Pinnacle PCTV Analogue Pro PCI

PCTV Analogue Pro PCI is a TV tuner card for analogue TV (antenna or cable) with stereo sound that also lets you listen to FM and Internet radio. Using the included Pinnacle MediaCenter software and remote control, you can watch, TimeShift and record TV shows. Recordings can be made to the hard drive or directly to DVD, in MPEG-2 or DivX TM formats. You can also play CDs and DVDs and access all the media files on your PC.

Watch stereo TV (cable or antenna) on your PC
Control live TV and FM radio with TimeShifting
Listen to stereo FM and Internet radio (Internet connection required; not available in all countries)
Scheduled or one-button recording
Direct-to-DVD or hard drive recording
Record in MPEG-1/-2 and DivX TM formats (DivX TM format is compatible with most portable media players)
Play and burn CDs and DVDs
Create photo slideshows
Infrared remote control included
Free Trial: Electronic Programme Guide (EPG) (Internet connection required)
PLUS: Compatible with Windows XP Media Center Edition
PLUS: Ultra-fast teletext
Plus: Remote control access to all your media files
Plus: Studio QuickStart video editing software included

System Requirements

TV Tuner: Analogue
Video Input: S-Video • Composite Video • TV Antenna
Video Coding: MPEG-1/2 • DivX
Controls: Remote Control

Intel Pentium 4 1.8 GHz or equivalent AMD Athlon XP (For usage with Windows Media Center, a Pentium 4 2.6 GHz is required) • 256 MB RAM (512 MB recommended) • UDMA/IDE hard disk (min. 5 GB free capacity) • Graphics /sound controllers with support for DirectX 9 or higher • PCI rev. 2.3 slot • CD-ROM drive
Operating Systems Supported: Windows XP (Home, Professional, or Media Center Edition 2005) with latest Service Pack
Form Factor: TV Card
Receiver Input: IEC connector

Release Date: Monday, 29th October 2007