if you broke the onboard camera, a direct replacement for that cmos sensor is what you need for the best succesrate.but its realy dificult to solder such tiny devices. or check if that module you shown, is actual USB (but I gues it was ment for car front or rear video recording, power, video, audio and ground leads) So I dont think you can do what you want. If you have root/openwrt, you might be able to use a video grabber. totaly depends on what kind of cmos sensor is used and if the Linux kernel installed has the required modules/drivers. Close the wizard and perform a system reboot to allow changes to take effect. Read EULA (End User Licence Agreement) and agree to proceed with the installation process. these surface mounted (CMOS?) camera's come on a sertain bus, probably CSI (like the RaspberyPi uses). Allow Windows to run the file (if necessary). if you broke the onboard camera, I dont think you can replace it with a random camera you got from somewhere. Linux has drivers/modules for these.īut I asume you can run openWRT on it or have root. Based on your picture I asume its a camera that outputs analog video, you could maybe use a USB AV grabber (also known as Eas圜ap)