Home  |  About  | Last |  Submit  |  Contact
AllQuests.com

Previous Question:  Chrome Hounds by From Software  Xbox 360Next Question:  Is its best to buy Official VGA cable  Xbox 360
Question PC use on Hitachi 32LD7200 Scaling vs lower resolution and other issues ( AVForums LCD Flat Panel Televisions )
Updated: 2008-08-12 06:07:18 (0)
PC use on Hitachi 32LD7200 Scaling vs lower resolution and other issues

I know that people are quite happy using the 32LD7200 with their PC/HTPC, since it has 1:1 pixel mapping.

What happens when you decide to run your PC at a lower resolution than the panel resolution. Does the set stop scaling and simply center the image with black borders around it?

I was wondering if lowering the resolution is a decent solution to view medium to highly compressed content (like a 40 minute TV shows in <350MB). I guess many digital broadcasts fall into that category. I know the picture will be smaller, but that will avoid excessive scaling. After all typically these things are in 512 x 288 or even 352 x 240 resolution, and blowing them up to to 1366 x 768 may render them unwatchable. Has anyone tried this workaround?

I'd be pretty dissapointed to find that the stuff I've been watching just fine on my 19" CRT all of a sudden becomes unwatchable on a big screen.

Out of curiosity, how does the scaler in the 32LD7200 compare to a software solution like FFD show? Does one have the option of having the set do the scaling instead of the PC?


freekb

Previous Question:  Chrome Hounds by From Software  PS3Forums  Xbox 360Next Question:  Is its best to buy Official VGA cable  PS3Forums  Xbox 360

- Source: PC use on Hitachi 32LD7200 Scaling vs lower resolution and other issues AVForums LCD Flat Panel Televisions
- Previous Question: Chrome Hounds by From Software PS3Forums Xbox 360
- Next Question: Is its best to buy Official VGA cable PS3Forums Xbox 360





AllQuests.com


Best dedicated servers   Top dedicated servers   Cheap dedicated servers   Linux dedicated servers   Windows dedicated servers   Unmetered dedicated servers