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?
It hardly seems worth using that much storage to my somewhat low fi tastes. Current NTSC resolution is wholly adequate for me. It is the message of the story that really counts, after all. Don't get me wrong, if it was affordable and terabyte scale storage was affordable to the average person, I would be much happier then without it...
But I would be much happier today if I could find a means to permanently archive my wealth of recorded [fair use, wink wink, although it was, afterall broadcast on cable services I subscribed to] media. I have several hundred VHS cassetes of programming [including every simpsons episode, every Pinky and the Brain episode, the State [long since cancelled sketch commedy show], etc. Perhaps not so much with the simpsons. I preserve things that you cannot buy in stores, anywhere, for I do not want them to slip away.
Probably for the same reason I tend to mirror sites I like. The recent flap with the death of Mathworld is a perfect example of the value of archiving. Web sites fit just fine on $0.44 CDR's, and so does music. But video is another beast, and I would be extremely happy if I could ever find an affordable option to digitally archive [even at less then broadcast quality] my videos, which are otherwise quietly degrading into noise.
My point is, that it's not so much ultra quality that matters, but longevity. If only MPG4 would come out, and someone would sell a hardware encoder. Sigh. [You still can't even buy MPG2 encoders for less then several thousand dollars, and MPG2 actually takes up -more- space the MPG1, [although the quality is actually at broadcast level, unlike MPG which isn't even at VHS-EP level.
--
man sig
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the pen is mightier then the sword. the sword is mightier then the court. the court is mightier then the pen.
Telemann's Sky Media 2000 card has had official linux support for a while now. Since their intended audience surely coincides well with linux users, it'll be an aberration if they don't provide linux support here.
-- Anne Marie
I just bought a 27" Sony Wega (ruler-flat) tube TV and a I love it. Sony has finally created a set that doesn't look like a tube at all. The set uses a FD Trinitron tube and the front glass essentially acts as a lens, so the screen is both vertically and horizontally flat. I'm using component video inputs (Monster Cable Component Video 3) to my DVD player, and the TV has an anamorphic 16:9 squeeze feature - very cool. It basically squeezes the TV's 4:3 viewing area into that of a 16:9 TV, roughly 1.85:1. I have my DVD player thinking that it's connected to a 16:9 HDTV set, so it sends an anamorphic signal and the TV does the squeezing itself. Anamorphic signal = highest picture quality.
So, until there are many stations that broadcast in HDTV (don't all have to by 2006?), I'll be happy with my Wega. The picture is fantastic.
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Oscarfish.com: tropical fish with attitude. Way t
There's a really great guide to anamorphic DVDs and their relationship to HDTV sets available online. It goes quite a bit into the emerging HDTV sets, as well as detailing why you should buy DVDs only if they are anamorphic (e.g. enhanced for 16:9 TVs), especially if you ever plan on watching them on a HDTV set (which do have a 16:9 aspect ratio).
The Digital Bits Ultimate Guide to Anamorphic Widescreen DVD (for Dummies!)
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Oscarfish.com: tropical fish with attitude. Way t
The MPAA is going to love this...
How long do you think it will be before they sue these guys or force them to add copy protection of some sort?
There are cable/sat channels (HBO for example) that broadcast feature length movies in HDTV, and with this card you can make perfect digital recordings.
Sure you need 15 gigs a movie when you first record them but can can always compress them using DivX or some other codec.
I smell law suit.
So you can buy a DigitalTV that doesn't do HD, or you can buy a HDTV that does it all. For now.
Usually you're buying a monitor that is spec'd for its capable resolutions, and you'll buy the tuner seperately, and if you're not using an HD set, somewhere in there scan lines will be discarded. The monitor, I suppose.
Here is Best Buy's attempt at an explanation.
I don't need large brains to have a good time.
Someone said, "Besides, why would you want to watch television - even if it is HDTV - on you computer? How many people have big huge 27in computer monitors, or have their monitor somewhere where they can sit and watch it in comfort?" Believe it or not, there are thousands of people who use their PC as the signal processing center of a home theater system. You can check out the bulletin board of a large user community at http://www.avsforum.com I myself use a PC and its DVD-ROM drive to watch DVD's with stunning results from my Compaq MP1600 projector on a 120 inch diagonal screen. Yes, that's 10 feet. My desire for HDTV on a PC should be obvious. By the way, you can get an excellent XGA projector for home theater for around $3,000. Front projection isn't ideal for everybody, for example you need to watch it in a darkened room for optimal results. But a 10 foot HDTV image for $3k (projector) + $400 PC-Card sure beats the pants off of most other HDTV solutions.