Virtual Console - No has NeoGeo
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Virtual Console - No has NeoGeo
Anyone notice this recently?
[img]http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y180/ReRuss/UBAR.gif[/img]
360 and PS3 - ReRuss
360 and PS3 - ReRuss
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- Devil's Advocate
- Posts: 2293
- Joined: Mon Aug 02, 2004 7:51 pm
- Location: Hmo. Son.
apparently you have to switch to the original AV cables and run in 480i in order for them to work
I think I'm gonna get one I want , and test this , except I'll also try on a 4:3 aspect via PC , I just wonder if I got 900 points to spare heh
I think I'm gonna get one I want , and test this , except I'll also try on a 4:3 aspect via PC , I just wonder if I got 900 points to spare heh
[img]http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y180/ReRuss/UBAR.gif[/img]
360 and PS3 - ReRuss
360 and PS3 - ReRuss
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- Buzzkill Gil
- Posts: 4295
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 7:14 pm
Alright, so RGB and component are pretty comparable in quality then.
I don't get the whole point of having separate black and white and colour info, since screens are made up of red, green and blue dots of course so anything that has to be displayed needs to be merged back anyway. What's more accurate than directly setting the RGB values of each pixel? What's the point of component? Having more cables is cool?
I don't get the whole point of having separate black and white and colour info, since screens are made up of red, green and blue dots of course so anything that has to be displayed needs to be merged back anyway. What's more accurate than directly setting the RGB values of each pixel? What's the point of component? Having more cables is cool?
[size=75][b]Procrastination.[/b]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
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- Buzzkill Gil
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- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 7:14 pm
Component doesn't have more lines than RGB.blackmyst wrote:Alright, so RGB and component are pretty comparable in quality then.
I don't get the whole point of having separate black and white and colour info, since screens are made up of red, green and blue dots of course so anything that has to be displayed needs to be merged back anyway. What's more accurate than directly setting the RGB values of each pixel? What's the point of component? Having more cables is cool?
RGB usually has separate sync lines, making RGB have more.
Component exists because the MPAA wanted a way for macrovision to work on DVD players as the electronics industry FINALLY gave in and started giving the US something more than composite(except for highest-end sets, which'd had s-vido for some time).
It's also easier to convert component to s-video, composite, or RF, since they're all based on the actual TV transmission standards, which are chroma+luma. But that's not why component exists in the consumer market.
And you're right, RGB is superior.
But in this case, I don't think it matters. I suspect the Wiis with RGB output choke similarly to the ones with component output.
Hmm, I'm going to have to test that then. Even though I don't really imagine why that would be, I've got RGB on everything from my old PS1 to my Wii and they all work perfectly. But I'll reserve judgment till I see it myself.
[size=75][b]Procrastination.[/b]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
for clarification of those that don't know:
RGB in consumer electronics isn't carried over the set of RCA jacks that are colored red, green and blue, thats Component(Y'PbPr) . RGB uses VGA, DVI or SCART connectors.
RGB in consumer electronics isn't carried over the set of RCA jacks that are colored red, green and blue, thats Component(Y'PbPr) . RGB uses VGA, DVI or SCART connectors.
Does [Kevin] Smith masturbate with steel wool too?
- Yes, but don’t change the subject.
- Yes, but don’t change the subject.
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- Buzzkill Gil
- Posts: 4295
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 7:14 pm
Or 5 BNC connectors!funkyass wrote:for clarification of those that don't know:
RGB in consumer electronics isn't carried over the set of RCA jacks that are colored red, green and blue, thats Component(Y'PbPr) . RGB uses VGA, DVI or SCART connectors.
Yes, that actually hit consumer-level stuff. Mainly on early HDTV monitors.
Conspiracy theory ahoy.Gil_Hamilton wrote:Component doesn't have more lines than RGB.blackmyst wrote:Alright, so RGB and component are pretty comparable in quality then.
I don't get the whole point of having separate black and white and colour info, since screens are made up of red, green and blue dots of course so anything that has to be displayed needs to be merged back anyway. What's more accurate than directly setting the RGB values of each pixel? What's the point of component? Having more cables is cool?
RGB usually has separate sync lines, making RGB have more.
Component exists because the MPAA wanted a way for macrovision to work on DVD players as the electronics industry FINALLY gave in and started giving the US something more than composite(except for highest-end sets, which'd had s-vido for some time).
It's also easier to convert component to s-video, composite, or RF, since they're all based on the actual TV transmission standards, which are chroma+luma. But that's not why component exists in the consumer market.
Would you believe Y Pr Pb has something to do with the way the data on the DVD's are compressed? That by essentially leaving the color space rotated and skewed, that the signal-to-noise ratio through the cable is also improved? That after the sync separation, the conversion from Y Pr Pb to RGB is a simple 3x3 matrix multiplication?
well, for a little history on transmissions standards.
When tv was born it was black and white, that went on for a bit, then smart people started getting colour to work, but where stuck with a problem: how to broadcast colour without leaving all the black and white sets in the dark.
The answer was the chroma+ luma system thats in use today, you have a B+W signal for the old tv, and one that added colour information to the B+W signal for the new ones.
And from this we get modern video compression.
When tv was born it was black and white, that went on for a bit, then smart people started getting colour to work, but where stuck with a problem: how to broadcast colour without leaving all the black and white sets in the dark.
The answer was the chroma+ luma system thats in use today, you have a B+W signal for the old tv, and one that added colour information to the B+W signal for the new ones.
And from this we get modern video compression.
Does [Kevin] Smith masturbate with steel wool too?
- Yes, but don’t change the subject.
- Yes, but don’t change the subject.
nice explanation, that makes sense. On a side note while black and white tvs are meh, black and white film rules in contrast and clearity, only now are we besting it with digital recording.
[quote="byuu"]Seriously, what kind of asshole makes an old-school 2D emulator that requires a Core 2 to get full speed? [i]>:([/i] [/quote]
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- Buzzkill Gil
- Posts: 4295
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 7:14 pm
Would you believe that the DVD forum explicitly bans standalone DVD players with RGB outputs?whicker wrote:Conspiracy theory ahoy.Gil_Hamilton wrote:Component doesn't have more lines than RGB.blackmyst wrote:Alright, so RGB and component are pretty comparable in quality then.
I don't get the whole point of having separate black and white and colour info, since screens are made up of red, green and blue dots of course so anything that has to be displayed needs to be merged back anyway. What's more accurate than directly setting the RGB values of each pixel? What's the point of component? Having more cables is cool?
RGB usually has separate sync lines, making RGB have more.
Component exists because the MPAA wanted a way for macrovision to work on DVD players as the electronics industry FINALLY gave in and started giving the US something more than composite(except for highest-end sets, which'd had s-vido for some time).
It's also easier to convert component to s-video, composite, or RF, since they're all based on the actual TV transmission standards, which are chroma+luma. But that's not why component exists in the consumer market.
Would you believe Y Pr Pb has something to do with the way the data on the DVD's are compressed? That by essentially leaving the color space rotated and skewed, that the signal-to-noise ratio through the cable is also improved? That after the sync separation, the conversion from Y Pr Pb to RGB is a simple 3x3 matrix multiplication?