Newtek Video Toaster Flyer card for Amiga 4000 2000 4000 non linear editing For Sale

Newtek Video Toaster Flyer card for Amiga 4000 2000 4000 non linear editing
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Newtek Video Toaster Flyer card for Amiga 4000 2000 4000 non linear editing:
$199.00

Newtek Video Toaster Flyer Card, this card serve us for many years and is still working like day one
Pulled from a working system we sold the Amiga 4000 t months ago, now selling the rest of the stuff
Here is a working Video Toaster Flyer card. I have also included the interconnect cable to hook up the flyer to the toaster buyer has to replace this connector on it toaster card make sure you get the installation instructions
since this is no a plug and play card you must follow the instructions carefully in order to get this working properly
I do not have the software for the video Flyer since we sold the system and give then to the buyer
but you can google it there is version 4.3 available free on the web
This is vintage electronics, and is sold with no warranty. Video Toaster Flyer

For the second generation NewTek introduced the Video Toaster Flyer. The Flyer is a much more capable non-linear editing system. In addition to just processing live video signals, the Flyer makes use of hard drives to store video clips as well as audio and allow complex scripted playback. The Flyer is capable of simultaneous dual-channel playback, which allows the Toaster's video switcher to perform transitions and other effects on video clips without the need for rendering.

The hardware component is again a card designed for the Amiga's Zorro II expansion slot, and was primarily designed by Charles Steinkuehler. The Flyer portion of the Video Toaster/Flyer combination is a complete computer of its own, having its own microprocessor and embedded software, which was written by Marty Flickinger. Its hardware includes three embedded SCSI controllers. Two of these SCSI buses are used to store video data, and the third to store audio. The hard drives are thus connected to the Flyer directly and use a proprietary filesystem layout, rather than being connected to the Amiga's buses and were available as regular devices using the included DOS driver. The Flyer uses a proprietary wavelet compression algorithm known as VTASC, which was well-regarded at the time for offering better visual quality than comparable motion-JPEG-based nonlinear editing systems.

One of the card's primary uses is for playing back LightWave 3D animations created in the Toaster.




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