Can anyone help please can you explain it in John and Janet language

What you'll need to do is:This and That wrote:I bought it at PC World and they did the instalation for me so i presume it's working ok.I have the icon on the desktop for Win 2000 and when i click on the icon the pic is all frosty even when i put the aerial socket from the tv in the back .Sorry to be so thick .
Hi- it does many thanks for that i'm gonna try can i just ask one more thing grovel grovel where does the video source come from then ?.itsrobert wrote:What you'll need to do is:This and That wrote:I bought it at PC World and they did the instalation for me so i presume it's working ok.I have the icon on the desktop for Win 2000 and when i click on the icon the pic is all frosty even when i put the aerial socket from the tv in the back .Sorry to be so thick .
1) Plug the aerial lead into the tv card.
2) Open WinTV 2000.
3) Click the menu button, and then click "Suite Manager".
4) Make sure the reception details are correct, i.e. ensure you select "antenna" if you're using a TV aerial, and that you're in PAL-I (if you're in the UK).
5) Select "auto scan", and it'll do the hard work for you. You'll see it scan all the UHF frequences, and it will list all the ones your aerial can pick up from local transmitters. Most of these will be useless, but amongst them will be BBC One, BBC Two, ITV1, Channel 4 and Five.
6) Once you've sorted them into the right order and deleted any channels you don't want, save the setup.
7) Click capture/record, and it'll save as either AVI or MPEG depending upon which tv card you have.
Hope that makes sense, and is helpful!
The TV signal is your source. This is why you connect your aerial to it to be able to pick anything up.This and That wrote:Hi- it does many thanks for that i'm gonna try can i just ask one more thing grovel grovel where does the video source come from then ?
Yep, that's if you're just looking for analogue television. I noticed in your first post that you also mentioned Sky. That complicates it a little. The way I've had it set up since 2001 is to have a SCART -> S-Video and 3 Phono socket adapter, as shown below...Neil Jones wrote:The TV signal is your source. This is why you connect your aerial to it to be able to pick anything up.This and That wrote:Hi- it does many thanks for that i'm gonna try can i just ask one more thing grovel grovel where does the video source come from then ?