To send Twain capture screenshots:
- Right-click the hotCam button. From the menu, select a Twain device.
The menu lists all Twain devices installed on your computer. If you have no devices, you see no list. If you previously installed Twain devices but currently do not have the hardware attached to your computer, they still display in the list.
- Click the hotCam button. It opens the software application for the Twain device you selected.
- Use the device software application to capture the image you want to send.
- Use the device software to send the captured image. It is sent through hotComm to the hotComm and IM-Live peers in the session.
On each peer's computer, the captured image displays in a hotCam window. A copy of the image is saved automatically in each peer's hotComm/UPLOADS folder.
Twain video
Note: If you are using hotComm version 1.01.004c or higher, use Webcam instead of hotCam for video images.
To send video captures:
- Right-click the hotCam button. From the menu, select the name of your video device.
Note: The hotCam list includes supported video devices that are listed in your Windows Control Panel under Scanners and Cameras.
- Click the hotCam button. This opens the hotCam Video Preview window and starts sending the timed video captures. This window shows you:
Item |
Example |
Capture Device Selected |
Sony MOTION EYE Video |
Capture Type | Still Capture or Video Capture |
Video Properties | Control and Format |
Snap Video | Still Collaborative Timed(5s) |
Status | Session 1 - Live Video Preview - 320x240 - 100% |
To set the interval for timed screenshots and video captures, use the hotCam Interval option in Preferences. The interval is in seconds.
Note: Timed hotCam screenshot and video capture updates skip slower modem peers until the next update cycle.
On each peer's computer, the video capture displays in a hotCam window. Copies of timed captures are not saved.
Supported Video Devices
Supported video devices: Your video camera or device must support the Windows Imaging Acquisition (WIA), Windows Direct-X STI still camera, or Twain technology.