volt
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2009-08-21
, 10:03
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Posts: 1,309 |
Thanked: 1,187 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
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#21
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2009-08-21
, 10:11
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Posts: 4,384 |
Thanked: 5,524 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ ˙ǝɹǝɥʍou
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#22
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2009-08-21
, 10:40
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Posts: 1,309 |
Thanked: 1,187 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
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#23
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2009-08-21
, 10:48
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Posts: 4,384 |
Thanked: 5,524 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ ˙ǝɹǝɥʍou
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#24
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Funny, that's the same they say on the Popcorn Hour forums about running a decent web browser. It is made for streaming, and it streams very well considering the miniscule hardware platform. It can also play directly from DVD, while doing the decrypting on the PCH side. As far as I can tell, it has a Sigma SMP8635 chip running on 300 Mhz. Decrypting DVDs has been done since the first DVD-roms were fitted into 200 Mhz Pentium MMXs. A Cortex CPU doesn't seem that weak compared to the PCH.
And all other arguments aside, there are no reasons why there could not be a PC side streaming server that does exactly what the VLC does, but optimized for the Maemo device. I have totally failed to get VLC streaming anything stable. Such software does exist for the PCH btw, and their community isn't that much bigger than this one.
It's not only a question about juice. It's a question about technology. Even today the N810 can play rips.
So, I don't need to find any juice, I need to find software :B
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2009-08-21
, 11:12
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Posts: 1,309 |
Thanked: 1,187 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
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#25
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2009-08-28
, 01:32
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Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 991 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
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#26
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The device hasn't been announced yet. We don't know for certain what kind of video output it has. The leaked images show a composite video cable, and the line drawings in the FCC filings might provide some hints as to what the connector looks like, but the question is still far from resolved.
If the RX-51 provides composite only, then interlaced SD video will be the limit. Your only HDMI adapter will be a bulky, and rather expensive, scaler.
If the RX-51 offers something better--component, RGB, Mini-DVI, Mini DisplayPort, Mini-HDMI, 3G-SDI--then you'll be able to explore the limits of the device's ability to push pixels to HD displays.