![]() "Proper" markup on Surface Pro as infrared, thus, hides sensor from the mentioned APIs and, respectively, OpenCV. Since OpenCV is supposedly interfacing directly to traditional Windows APIs, DirectShow and Media Foundation, it is highly unlikely that it is capable of capturing infrared stream out of the box, unless, of course, the driver itself represents it as normal video. Any software or support resources provided by Lenovo are made available AS IS. This product is no longer being actively supported by development (End of Development Support) and no further software updates will be provided. Update drivers with the largest database available. Intel Integrated Camera Driver for Windows 10 (64-bit) - Yoga Book C930 - Lenovo Support US. UWP/OpenCV bridging might be on help there: Create a helper Windows Runtime component for OpenCV interop. Get the latest official Intel AVStream Camera 2500 imaging or camera drivers for Windows 11, 10, 8.1, 8, 7, Vista and XP PCs. Given that this is UWP API, you might have troubles fitting this all together with OpenCV if you need the latter. This API is built on top of Media Foundation and Sensor APIs and gets you infrared cameras even though underlying Media Foundation alone has no equivalent public interface. You can read infrared frames through a newer API offered for UWP development: Process media frames with MediaFrameReader, the keyword there is this: MediaFrameSourceKind.Infrared. Microsoft did not update the API to extend it to such inputs even though it is technically possible when it comes to undocumented. To my best knowledge Media Foundation API has no support for infrared cameras. ![]()
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