http://www.misco.co.uk/applications/...&sourceid=6426
Looks a decent price at £35
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http://www.misco.co.uk/applications/...&sourceid=6426
Looks a decent price at £35
People were talking about fannying about to get their PC movies and stuff onto big telly things.
I just thought, like.
And also it looks like it's from the 70s. Which makes it even cooler.
http://img.misco.co.uk/images/upload...0201121740.jpg
use hdmi or do something else.
It does these resolutions 640 x 480 / 800 x 600 / 1024 x 768 I thought that meant it was capable of sending them to the device.
1024x768 would look okay on a big telly but it'd be a square picture with black borders down the sides cause it's not widescreen. (tho' it is technically hi-def)
They'd look fine on a standard definition tellybox, like, but those resolutions would make stuff look blocky on a big 1080p (1920x1080) tellybox.
Tolerable for watching once, like, on newer screens. Non-huge LCD-screens and the like.
The older type of TV, wot with tubes, is pretty forgiving. It's like it does its own anti-aliasing or something else. On something based on that sort of tech even 320 times woteva can look good, though.
Back-projection TVs come somewhere in between, in my experience.
It's debatable whether those constitute good tellies, though.
Thanks for that, good clear explanation and it's to your credit.
Obviously there'd still be the black borders on anything wide-screen, though. Or really fat-looking actors.
My last was at Peabody but it goes for Snee as well.
It was clear and it's to your credit tho'.
Those resolutions are fine unless it's an HD Telly.
it wouldn't be in hd tho', obviousment.
Gotcha, it's the resolution and it's a digital rather than an analogue signal.
So my 19 inch widescreen (which is HD) would look OK with the highest resolution there, but it wouldn't be HD.
Might be some graphical artifacts, lyke. But I've never tried that with anyhing wot wasn't already compressed and thus prone to having artifacts because of that as well. So I don't know for certain.
Indeed and it's not ideal. However it does seem to do a decent job.
Some tellies stretch evenly right across the image. Other leave the middle pretty much alone and stretch more as the get further from the middle. On the basis that people will be looking at the middle of the image most of the time and will see the rest in their peripheral vision.
Like I said it's really not ideal but it does a decent job, in my opinion.
Ewe mite notice some static or blobs, or whateva' wot aren't supposed to be there due to the mucking about with converting signals :unsure:
Depends a bit on how the stuff that goes through the converter is treated and so on.