On 10/12/05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 10/9/05, Chris Ribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Put a stopwatch on a 2 minute commercial break and report the results.
The problem is, how do you know exactly how long a commercial break is? If
the typical commerical is 30 seconds
Why not time the commercial while playing normally.Then exit,restart the program and increase the speed and check the times again.
I have noticed it, but just assumed it wsd my head playing around withme.It has a habbit of doing that :\
Alright, so I tested this by comparing the OSD display of the
On 10/9/05, Chris Ribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Put a stopwatch on a 2 minute commercial break and report the results.
The problem is, how do you know exactly how long a commercial break
is? If the typical commerical is 30 seconds long, a difference of
10% in speed would only be 3 seconds, but how
Put a stopwatch on a 2 minute commercial break and report the results.On 10/8/05, Michael T. Dean [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have MythTV 0.18 running on a remote frontend which is an XBox with Xebian 1.0.3. I have noticed that after I watch any program at an accelerated
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have MythTV 0.18 running on a remote frontend which is an XBox with
Xebian 1.0.3.
I have noticed that after I watch any program at an accelerated speed
(such as 1.5X or 2X), when I return to normal playback speed (1X), the
program is not quite played at 1X. It
I have MythTV 0.18 running on a remote frontend which is an XBox with Xebian 1.0.3.
I have noticed that after I watch any program at an accelerated speed
(such as 1.5X or 2X), when I return to normal playback speed (1X), the
program is not quite played at 1X. It seems a little slower
(maybe 0.95