My suggestion is to plug the device in and let Windows recognise it and see what happens - installing the specialist device drivers may be counter productive and that's what's preventing it seeing an alternative editor - I'm just guessing here. I use a USB interface if I want to capture from a VCR. I don't have one, so cant comment on whether it'll work with PDR12. Cryptocat for mac purports driber program is eriver, additional functions of fun photos, which you makes it an ineffective choice.
There really isn't anything special about the USB interface, just it's made by Pinnacle. Pinnacle 710-usb contains the driver for the pinnacle moviebox 710-usb, that will provide you with the proper installation of the device on your computer.
#Pinnacle systems 710 usb for free#
Download pinnacle 710-usb drivers for windows 10 32bit, 64 bit 59.36.245.8883 for free here. You may be up against a proprietary driver set up for your device which will only communicate with the company's own software. Pinnacle systems 700-usb device contains the driver for the 700-usb device, that will provide you with the proper installation of the device on your computer. Has anyone else used the Pinnacle 710-USB? Any suggestions? I could try and instal Pinnacle 14 on this machine, but it seems like overkill to have 2 video editing programmes on the one machine and I'm worried about outdated drivers and. I've been unable to locate a Windows 8 driver for the Moviebox - if indeed there is one. On my current machine, the previous driver instals seemingly without a problem, but neither PDR12, Movie Maker, nor Corel Studio 14 (which I've now uninstalled) could "see" the capture device. I had Pinnacle Studio 14 Ultimate installed on my previous (Windows 7) PC and could capture with the "Moviebox" (710-USB) hardware that came with the software. I want to capture video from an analog VCR. Quote: I have Power Director 12 suite installed on a Windows 8 machine with Intel i7, 32 GB RAM, blueray burner and four USB-3 ports.