TV tuner cards and VCRs  | |
March 25th, 2004, 06:01 PM
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#1 (permalink)
| | Free Thinker
Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: Charleston, Illinois
Posts: 4,522
| TV tuner cards and VCRs
Two-part question here.
1. If I install a TV tuner card in a PC, shouldn't I be able to hook a VCR to it and watch movies on my monitor?
2. If yes to #1, if I hook a digital projector to the PC, will the movie project, or is it run in a different layer than the desktop image?
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March 26th, 2004, 04:01 AM
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#2 (permalink)
| | Ultimate Member
Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: PA. USA
Posts: 3,310
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1) Yes. But if its a retail tape it will have macro copy protection and will get bright then dark or warble the sound! Home video's work fine though. You can find proggys to makeyour tv card ignore that macro of course.
2) That requires tv out not in. Tuner card ='s pumping video in to pc. Tv out pumps it out but is only available on video card nto as a add on.
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March 26th, 2004, 05:38 AM
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#3 (permalink)
| | Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 961
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Last edited by cysus : March 26th, 2004 at 05:41 AM.
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March 26th, 2004, 08:11 AM
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#4 (permalink)
| | Ultimate Member
Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: Augsburg, Germany
Posts: 5,586
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1) is a Yes.
2) does not depend on 1) at all. If your projector projects what the computer is displaying, then it'll also show what's been rendered from your video-in source. You might have limitations when trying to show the same video stream on two display units. |
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March 26th, 2004, 11:41 AM
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#5 (permalink)
| | Free Thinker
Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: Charleston, Illinois
Posts: 4,522
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Thanks folks. And Peter M, you are, as always, spot on. I had a long talk with the projector manufacturer's tech folks and it seems I was thinking too much into it. I know when I see my home desktop from work using Remote Admin, I can't watch videos. But that's because the signal going out through the NIC doesn't contain the right layer. But the signal going out to the local monitor, which is what the projector uses, will have all the layers. So it should work fine.
Thanks all.  |
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March 26th, 2004, 12:25 PM
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#6 (permalink)
| | norml.org
Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: SoCal
Posts: 5,436
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I find its better to purchase a stand alone card rather then an all-in-wonder---you will eventually want to replace your videocard but not your TV system, I use the Compro VideoMate TV Gold Plus http://www.comprousa.com/products/vmtvgoldplus.htm
You can plug almost anything related to sound and video into it, has an ir remote, allows power up scheduled recording from an "off" computer (boots computer, records, then shuts down) picks up and allows FM recording as well, and comes with a pretty good video edit/dvd software bundle---its about $60 at Newegg |
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March 26th, 2004, 03:26 PM
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#7 (permalink)
| | Ultimate Member
Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: Augsburg, Germany
Posts: 5,586
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M_Six, that phenomenon is exactly what I was about. You can't copy the video overlay to a second display (remote or local) simply because the overlay isn't being merged into the display surface in the card's framebuffer RAM. The graphics chip inserts it "live" into the outgoing display signal. Your projector of course receives that very signal, with the video overlay merged in perfectly fine. |
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March 26th, 2004, 06:16 PM
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#8 (permalink)
| | Ultimate Member
Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: PA. USA
Posts: 3,310
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"If yes to #1, if I hook a digital projector to the PC, will the movie project, or is it run in a different layer than the desktop image?"
You guys confused me. "will the movie project" yes with s-video out on a graphics card that has output. VGA isnt the only way but is another.... some even have R-G-B component input or optical or yet even DV-i. I have a projector so Im trying to figure out what else you could possibly mean? Do you want to play a minimised window full screen on pj? If so yes it does that........ |
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March 27th, 2004, 12:13 AM
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#9 (permalink)
| | Free Thinker
Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: Charleston, Illinois
Posts: 4,522
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Basically I have a PC with an onboard vid connection. Standard 15-pin VGA. That connection goes to a splitter box with two cables, one of which goes to the monitor and the other to the projector. I want to install a TV tuner card in the PC and hook a VCR to it via a coax cable, and then use the TV tuner card's TV viewing software to watch VCR tapes and have them viewable on a screen by using the projector. As we've noted above, this should work fine.
The current setup we have uses the RGB cables for the PC and S-video cables for the VCR. Too many cables. It's a mess. I want to reduce the number of cables running to the projector. Now I should be able to use just the standard VGA cable and an audio cable. |
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March 27th, 2004, 12:16 PM
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#10 (permalink)
| | Ultimate Member
Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: PA. USA
Posts: 3,310
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O.K. I see now. Thanks for explaning. |
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