> In general, get a gt220, as it has built in audio hardware, so that
> you should get audio without clock drift relative to the hdmi output.
> It is also powerfull enough to do temporal spatial deinterlacing on
> 1080i material.
what do you think about
NVIDIA's GeForce GT 430
http://www.anandte
On Sat, Jan 15, 2011 at 1:09 PM, Goga777 wrote:
>> In general, get a gt220, as it has built in audio hardware, so that
>> you should get audio without clock drift relative to the hdmi output.
>> It is also powerfull enough to do temporal spatial deinterlacing on
>> 1080i material.
>
> what do you
On 15/01/11 21:49, VDR User wrote:
On Sat, Jan 15, 2011 at 1:09 PM, Goga777 wrote:
In general, get a gt220, as it has built in audio hardware, so that
you should get audio without clock drift relative to the hdmi output.
It is also powerfull enough to do temporal spatial deinterlacing on
1080i
On Sat, Jan 15, 2011 at 2:36 PM, Tony Houghton wrote:
> I wonder whether it might be possible to use a more eonomical card which
> is only powerful enough to decode 1080i without deinterlacing it and
> take advantage of the abundant CPU power most people have nowadays to
> perform software deinter
Hello,
I read about the ongoing work at the OSD system.
I have to confess, that I don't really miss a truecolor OSD, but what I miss
is the possibility to configure the OSD for each output-device separately.
Currently I use a "backend"-vdr with budget-cards and an old fashioned FF. My
TV is plu
I don't know about any of that but I wonder if the new osd system will
be able to maintain widescreen HD resolution even when viewing 4:3 SD
channels. Or if it will behave as it currently does,
stretches/shrinks according to the channel/recording you're watching.
Preferrably it won't do that, or a
Hello,
VDR User wrote:
> I don't know about any of that but I wonder if the new osd system will
> be able to maintain widescreen HD resolution even when viewing 4:3 SD
> channels. Or if it will behave as it currently does,
> stretches/shrinks according to the channel/recording you're watching.
>