Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)
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  • #29786
    Les.Les.
    Participant
      @oldles
      Forumite Points: 42

      Some time ago, Skype, used in Linux, suddenly would not see webcams, though audio remained OK. This affected Tamara’s laptop. Later, “Skypeforlinux” appeared, so I installed that on my PC and her laptop. Still no video on hers.

      But mine was OK, and she had her tablet as well, so it got ignored.

      Recently I installed the latest Mint 19.1 on my PC, using the replacement SSD following the earlier failure. Everything OK, though many little changes, and  Skypeforlinux still OK for me.

      I took the plunge, and installed 19.1 on Tamara’s laptop. The “faulty” internal WiFi card was magically repaired (well, it just worked), as did everything else, EXCEPT her webcam. A Logitech Quickcam for notebooks, De-Luxe. She still had audio, which I then realised was built into the laptop.

      I tried the Webcam on my PC, DEAD. My pal took it away, only to find it works perfectly on one of his Windoze computers.

      Bearing in mind that it had worked perfectly for a few year with Mint, I thought I would re-check the Linux compatibility tables. Search as I may, they seem to have disappeared. One promising link went to a blank page. Have they all been dropped? I have never previously had something lose compatibility. Comments?

      Les.

      #29787
      Ed PEd P
      Participant
        @edps
        Forumite Points: 39

        Try Cheese to check if you get a pic.

        #29788
        Les.Les.
        Participant
          @oldles
          Forumite Points: 42

          Ed, been there. Cheese is my go to when any queries. When I tried it with MY computer, skype “saw” a black screen, but did not recognise it as anything (including no sound). Surprisingly, cheese saw nothing.

          Les.

          #29792
          Wheels-Of-FireWheels-Of-Fire
          Participant
            @grahamdearsley
            Forumite Points: 4

            Is there a version of the logitech webcam software for linux ? In the past I found that just installing that got the camera working with everything else on Windows. Something about the kernel mode driver needing a user mode program to communicate with other user mode programs. I believe the problem surfaced again on some systems after the Spectre Bug fixes. Not on mine though.

            #29795
            D-DanD-Dan
            Participant
              @d-dan
              Forumite Points: 6

              I have two Logitech HD cameras (one on the desktop and one on an RPi) and they work fine on both. V4L legacy was dropped, and support for her webcam may have gone with it.

              This won’t translate directly, but take a read of the Arch wiki and see if it helps. https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/webcam_setup#V4L1_support

              Arch Linux, on a Ryzen 7 1800X, 32 GB, 5 (yes -5) HDs inc 5 SSDs, 4 RPi 3Bs + 1 RPi 4B - one as an NFS server with two more drives, PiHole (shut yours), Plex server, cloud server, and other random Pi stuff. Nice CoolerMaster case, 2 x NV GTX 1070 8GB, and a whopping 32" AOC 1440P monitor.

              #29816
              Les.Les.
              Participant
                @oldles
                Forumite Points: 42

                DDan,  I guess your link explains the loss of support. Perhaps that big, easily accessible list of webcam support or not support that I can no longer find is because much of it is NLA (applicable). I realise it is not all logitech webcams. I currently use a C270, and it gives very good sound and video. The problem with those however is quite expensive, and not very reliable. My current one is No. 3 over a 4 year period or thereabouts.

                However, I think I will be getting another if I can’t find anything else suitable.

                Which ones do you have.

                Les.

                #29820
                D-DanD-Dan
                Participant
                  @d-dan
                  Forumite Points: 6

                  I’m pretty sure they are this: https://www.amazon.co.uk/HP-Webcam-2300-Entry-720p/dp/B0087UIJKI

                  No additional drivers needed on Linux – V4L works just fine.

                  Arch Linux, on a Ryzen 7 1800X, 32 GB, 5 (yes -5) HDs inc 5 SSDs, 4 RPi 3Bs + 1 RPi 4B - one as an NFS server with two more drives, PiHole (shut yours), Plex server, cloud server, and other random Pi stuff. Nice CoolerMaster case, 2 x NV GTX 1070 8GB, and a whopping 32" AOC 1440P monitor.

                  #29827
                  Les.Les.
                  Participant
                    @oldles
                    Forumite Points: 42

                    DDan, is that a slip of the pen? You said two logitech webcams, but your link is to an HP, or maybe they are the same thing in different clothes?

                    Les.

                    #29834
                    D-DanD-Dan
                    Participant
                      @d-dan
                      Forumite Points: 6

                      My original was a slip of the keyboard. It’s the HPs that I have, and work faultlessly (including the audio).

                      My apologies, my bad.

                      Arch Linux, on a Ryzen 7 1800X, 32 GB, 5 (yes -5) HDs inc 5 SSDs, 4 RPi 3Bs + 1 RPi 4B - one as an NFS server with two more drives, PiHole (shut yours), Plex server, cloud server, and other random Pi stuff. Nice CoolerMaster case, 2 x NV GTX 1070 8GB, and a whopping 32" AOC 1440P monitor.

                      #29835
                      Les.Les.
                      Participant
                        @oldles
                        Forumite Points: 42

                        DDan, no problem, I have ordered one. That means both the Logitech 270 AND the HP 2300 are good to go.

                        I will look maybe tomorrow to see if the “broken” webcam  can be made to work, in the knowledge that there is a worker on its way.

                        Cheers, Les.

                        #29848
                        Les.Les.
                        Participant
                          @oldles
                          Forumite Points: 42

                          My pal who had checked the “faulty” Logitech Quickcam for Notebooks De Luxe on his windoze computers called around today bringing it with him. Leaving my good Logitech C270 plugged in, I plugged the “faulty” one in a front USB, then later tried the Microsoft Lifecam  instead. — Same results in each case:-

                          Cheese. Saw the C270, but remained unaware of the other one.

                          Skype for linux. Worked with the C270, “Saw” the other one, but blank screen only.

                          VLC. Both webcams seen, were selectable, and worked!

                          Obviously linux can see them, but Skype can not use, and Cheese can neither see nor use.

                          Just waiting for the HP to arrive.

                          Les.

                          #29851
                          Ed PEd P
                          Participant
                            @edps
                            Forumite Points: 39

                            Just a thought, can your friend check to ensure that your web cams are not stuck in ‘privacy’ mode?

                            #29861
                            Les.Les.
                            Participant
                              @oldles
                              Forumite Points: 42

                              Ed, Mr DuckDuckGo has a few reports of webcams no longer working with Skype, with similar comments on cheese and VLC.

                              However, the HP webcam has arrived, and Tamara now has full sound and video once more. Popularity restored.

                              There will shortly be two webcams listed on Ebay, A Logitech Quickcam for notebooks deluxe, and a Microsoft Lifecam VX-1000.

                              Not suitable for Linux will be appended. That should see the back of them!

                              Les.

                              #29863
                              D-DanD-Dan
                              Participant
                                @d-dan
                                Forumite Points: 6

                                Glad the HP worked. I have one the desktop for ad hoc use, and one plugged into a Pi running MotionEyeOS as surveillance. Both work a treat.

                                Arch Linux, on a Ryzen 7 1800X, 32 GB, 5 (yes -5) HDs inc 5 SSDs, 4 RPi 3Bs + 1 RPi 4B - one as an NFS server with two more drives, PiHole (shut yours), Plex server, cloud server, and other random Pi stuff. Nice CoolerMaster case, 2 x NV GTX 1070 8GB, and a whopping 32" AOC 1440P monitor.

                                #29907
                                Ed PEd P
                                Participant
                                  @edps
                                  Forumite Points: 39

                                  Dan, if you want a little more customization than that offered by MotionEye you may want to take a look at using OpenCV plus motion detection on a Pi, pretty easy to modify this to add pan/tilt tracking to the camera. Link

                                  One minor problem I have is that .profile (in home on a Pi) is not always read on boot – any idea what could be wrong with my setup? (easily fixed using souce ~/.profile but not really automagical.

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