Official Gadgeteer Hands On Review: CVideo-Mail Pro
by Mark Goddard
Last date revised: 02/21/99

Discontinued Product

Program Requirements:
Desktop:
PC with a Pentium processor and an available PCI slot.
Windows 98 or 95
Minimum 16mb RAM
4mb disk space from CVideo-Mail
Sound card (SoundBlaster compatible)
CDrom
Monitor capable of viewing 256 colors

CVideo-Mail Pro is a software/hardware solution for sending video email to anyone, including family, friends, co-workers,etc. CVideo-Mail lets you attach full-motion video with audio to your every day email and requires no special software to play these emails on the receiver's side. CVideo-Mail's MAPI (Messaging Application Programming Interface) compliance is compatible with Netscape Communicator, Microsoft Internet Explorer, America Online, Compuserve and all other e-mail programs that allow file attachments.

The CVideo-Mail Professional Package includes:

Hard copy documentation includes:

The CVideo-Mail Pro hardware/software combo was a pain to install, in my opinion. You had to first install the software drivers. Then you had to power off your computer and install the PCI video capture card. Then you had to power back up and finish the software install. I'll admit that the first time thru, I didn't read the instructions and just put the PCI card in, powered up and installed the drivers... it didn't work.  Once I followed the instructions, things flowed smoothly.

Hardware:

CVideo-Mail Pro comes with the Philips Desktop Video Camera, which has a built-in microphone, a 3.8mm f2.0 lens that can be adjusted from almost zero for extreme close-ups to infinity for long shots. The camera is small and sits on a black base that lets you adjust the direction and angle. There is a green ON light and a mini microphone on the front of the camera. On the back of the camera are several switches that let you control gain and contrast. Other small desktop cameras, home camcorders or VCRs can all be plugged directly into the card to create video e-mail.

The video card has 3 jacks: microphone, power, and the video jack. This make it complicated because the original cord is not long enough if you want to move the camera any distance away from your computer.

One problem that I encountered was that my sound would be turned off whenever I would finish using the camera. I had to go into my multimedia settings to manually turn it back on.

Software:

The video capture software was not as easy to operate as other video capture software that I have tried. On others, everything was on the main program window. With the CVideo-Mail you have to go into the settings to change things. When you take a still picture it records sound in the back ground. I was not happy with that. When you go to save something to your hard drive with save as... it will not automatically go to the last place you saved something. You have to navigate to the same directory each time. Others I have used would automatically return to the folder you last saved in.

CVideo-Mail can compress video to file sizes as small as 500KB per minute. Depending on the compression settings that a user chooses, the average file size is 1MB per minute of video. It saves the still images and video as a self extracting .EXE file which that doesn't require a special player. This is convenient.

CVideo-Mail video clip 705k
CVideo-Mail still macro image 182k

Using this camera with video conferencing software such as Netmeeting resulted in choppy video.

All in all, the little camera was decent. The set up was somewhat tricky. The video quality was adequate. The software was decent. I have just seen better in my opinion.

Price: $179.95 (also available for $99.95 without camera)

Pros:
Good compression scheme.
Works with any email program that allows attachments.
Person receiving the file doesn't need a special player.

Cons:
Installation was strange.
Image quality is a little fuzzy.

Let me know your comments on the CVideo-Mail Pro product.
Read what others have to say about this product on the Owners Comment Page