but CNET has had a newsletter "Community Help and How-to" discussion about this recently, and the replies and suggestions are in the thread here;
http://forums.cnet.com/5208-12542_102-0.html?threadID=377383
It's long, so I'm not going to narrow it down for you. That's your next task, ![]()
Good luck.
Mark
I have all my old VHS bricks with two decades' accumulation of miscellaneous stuff, and dearly want to get them digitized so I can throw the bricks out and save a few hundred cubic feet of storage space.
Before my XP system died I was using an ADS DVDXpress DX2 external interface and their excellent "Capwiz" capture software, but... the XP system died, ADS was sold to another company, and apparently nobody in charge thinks that customers want or need drivers compatible with Windows 7. So my ADS box has become an impressive-looking relic.
Any recommendations for inexpensive stand-ins for the DVD Xpress? It was a great capture system in that it was shockingly simple to set up and never, *ever* got audio and video out of sync. Ever. It was a great tool, and a real shame its manufacturer can't be bothered to support it for simple OS upgrades. I want to emphasize that I want a setup that's capable of keeping audio and video in perfect sync - none of that rip-out-your-hair junk you see on YouTube where the audio is a full 400mS behind the video or vice-versa. It's the 21st Century, there is no excuse for that kind of thing IMO.
Thanks for any suggestions - I know I can't be the only one facing this problem...

Chowhound
Comic Vine
GameFAQs
GameSpot
Giant Bomb
TechRepublic