Robert Winder wrote:
Saturday, December 6, 2003, 6:00:59 AM, Murray wrote:
/usr/X11R6/bin/xinit /root/freevo.start -- /usr/X11R6/bin/X -xf86config
/etc/X11/XF86Config bc -screen NVTVOUT vt8
/root/freevo.stop
try it with bc -s off -dpms. Works for me.
Works for me too! Thanks!
and
Here is what my monitor section looks like:
Section Monitor
Identifier Monitor0
VendorName Monitor Vendor
ModelNameGeneric Extended Super VGA, 800x600 @ 60 Hz,
640x480 @ 72 Hz
DisplaySize 350270
HorizSync31.5 -
Hi,
since 1.4 is not bugfree, I guess we should release Freevo 1.4.1 next
sunday. CVS is not stable right now, so 1.4.1 will base on 1.4 with
the following patches:
o add a missing 'config.' to prevent rom_drives from crashing (noone
except me noticed)
o the tvtime patch to make it work
Quoting Ryan [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
These settings have given the worst results so far :(. I'll call the
company and see what they say, otherwise its off to ebay.
I could swear I've heard of / seen a tool that gets windows to fess up
what sync rates it's using, in a form that you can get them
Have you tried having X autoprobe for the settings? What is it,
XFree86 --setup
or something like that?
Ryan wrote:
These settings have given the worst results so far :(. I'll call the
company and see what they say, otherwise its off to ebay.
On Sun, 2003-12-07 at 08:07, Matthew Caron wrote:
Believe the flag is --configure
On Sun, 2003-12-07 at 18:10, Matthew Caron wrote:
Have you tried having X autoprobe for the settings? What is it,
XFree86 --setup
or something like that?
Ryan wrote:
These settings have given the worst results so far :(. I'll call the
company and see
Yes, that was the first thing I tried and it didn't work. I would think
there are many programs out there that will let me see what my XP laptop
is outputting so that I can paste it into Xf86.
On Sun, 2003-12-07 at 18:10, Matthew Caron wrote:
Have you tried having X autoprobe for the settings?
Actually I just plugged the vga converter back into my XP laptop and the
display isn't crisp at all. This thing sucks. Don't buy the Startech vga
converter. I'm going to try to get my money back. I'll buy that GrandTec
you have when I get some money. Is the display nice and crisp?
-ryan
On Sun,
It depends on what you mean. It's not as crisp as a monitor, but it's as
crisp as all the video game systems I hook up to my TV. The limit is how
good the TV can display.
Ryan wrote:
Actually I just plugged the vga converter back into my XP laptop and the
display isn't crisp at all. This thing
Quoting Matthew Caron [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
It depends on what you mean. It's not as crisp as a monitor, but it's as
crisp as all the video game systems I hook up to my TV. The limit is how
good the TV can display.
When i decided to build an htpc, I researched the vga-to-tv converter
Quoting Ryan [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Originally I had bought a G450-DH, but it went bad, and I could never
get the TV out to work anyways. Are you using framebuffering? My TNT2
did a nice job on the TV but I couldn't get it to take up the
full-screen. I'm currently in the process of returning the
I have just plugged the TV-out back into my nVidia TNT2. The display is
still smooshed, though no flickering ;). There are black bars on either
side of the display. Is there an X settings that I can use to expand the
display to take up the full screen?
I'm using the drivers off of nvidia's site.
I got my EPIA-M mostly working with freevo. See my site
http://www.xs4all.nl/~octavo/ps2 for details. I am using a recent
version of the VIA drivers and they work well with Xv.
I need to spend some more time getting everything completely configured
in freevo (and get rid of a memory leak).
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