Domain: telemann.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to telemann.com.
Stories · 3
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PCI Card Lets You Watch HDTV (And Save To Disk)
computer_chacham writes: "Telemann has introduced the first available PCI card for $400 that shows full HDTV resolution on your computer. It also is able to directly take the MPEG-2 HDTV signal, and store it directly on your hard drive. (About 7.7 Gigs/hour, but still ...) It is also able to output to a TV. They have a press release, and a product page. And e-town has a description too." Ready-or-not, if you watch the boob tube, you'll soon be watching HDTV -- compared to buying a new TV set, a card like this seems like a smart idea, especially at the cost of storage today and tomorrow. What are the odds it'll ship with support for any Free OSes? -
PCI Card Lets You Watch HDTV (And Save To Disk)
computer_chacham writes: "Telemann has introduced the first available PCI card for $400 that shows full HDTV resolution on your computer. It also is able to directly take the MPEG-2 HDTV signal, and store it directly on your hard drive. (About 7.7 Gigs/hour, but still ...) It is also able to output to a TV. They have a press release, and a product page. And e-town has a description too." Ready-or-not, if you watch the boob tube, you'll soon be watching HDTV -- compared to buying a new TV set, a card like this seems like a smart idea, especially at the cost of storage today and tomorrow. What are the odds it'll ship with support for any Free OSes? -
PCI Card Lets You Watch HDTV (And Save To Disk)
computer_chacham writes: "Telemann has introduced the first available PCI card for $400 that shows full HDTV resolution on your computer. It also is able to directly take the MPEG-2 HDTV signal, and store it directly on your hard drive. (About 7.7 Gigs/hour, but still ...) It is also able to output to a TV. They have a press release, and a product page. And e-town has a description too." Ready-or-not, if you watch the boob tube, you'll soon be watching HDTV -- compared to buying a new TV set, a card like this seems like a smart idea, especially at the cost of storage today and tomorrow. What are the odds it'll ship with support for any Free OSes?