Related topics

Digital Cable S-Video
Can I use the gun with my monitor and the VGA box? Yes, it should work fine. My Lightgun won't calibrate and the aim is off. Help? .... They will work with a composite/RF/S-Video connection. Games known to not work are: Giga Wing (JAP) Skies of Arcadia (US) Pen Pen (JAP) US Web Browser version 2.0 This list is

ATI All In Wonder 7500 TV picture turns black and white
DXR3) have s-video out (not quite the same as component). In the past I've hooked my DXR3 up to my TV via the s-video connection & when playing good old US NTSC disks you get good old NTSC output to the TV. I must admit I usually watch on my monitor, so NTSC & PAL don't really come into the equation apart for the

S-Video and Comb Filters
Which makes me believe it is somewhere between the Digital Cable Boxes and Emuzed TV Tuner (ie the Composite-to-S-Video adapters that came with the tuner card). the details you reference and info on the types of cabling you are using and if you are outputting to a TV or standard CRT or using dual monitors.

S-Video signal via Scart cable
I was quite disappointed that it didn't have S-Video and digital audio outputs. As with you the manual showed a picture with a S-Video connection noting that it was an option. My cable company, Shaw, just started offering a new service a month ago based on the GI DCT 2000 box with S-Video out and digtial audio out.

S-video looks NO better than composite?!
This suggests that if you use the S-video connection and your TV hasn't got a good digital comb filter much of the Tosh's pictorial talent might get spoilt by some colour flaring interference over fine details. So either make sure you've got a top TV, or else use the RGB hookup if possible. Finally we get to audio,

Direct TV/DiSH Picture Quality
I used a 3dfx Voodoo 3500 board, with an s-video connection. I used a simple generic capture program so that I could be sure that there would be no pre/post You have to have very fast phosphors in your monitor (or a fast refresh LCD monitor) to notice this. Most regular televisions won't show this because their

Sony TV problem - DVD dark scenes don't display
The reason S Video is superior to Composite Video is because an S Video signal is made of two signals, Y and C. Y=Luminance/Brightness and If your monitor takes an RGB signal or takes Composite Video via a wierd connector, then you can almost certainly do it, but you'll probably need a soldering iron!

dual monitors
There is no more source image resolution, however on the computer monitor there are two factors coming into play. I am guessing the monitor is smaller than your TV (unless you have a But you said in another post that the S-video connection actually increases resolution over a standard composite video output.

!Videodesk and Replay files
Shaw Goh s...@netplus.com.au rec photo digital I got around this problem by using a Matrox Dual Head on the computer. Or a second video card with Win 98 or NT Our Kodak DC290 doesn't seem to support simultaneous PC and S-Video connection. If you set the mode dial to PC MODE, the display turns off altogether.

A question on S-Video
but we also want an S-Video display of the viewfinder for photo composition. Unfortunately, we have found that these two features don't work together on most cameras. Our Kodak DC290 doesn't seem to support simultaneous PC and S-Video connection. If you set the mode dial to PC MODE, the display turns off altogether

S-Video
If all of your inputs are s-video and you are not going to be receiving over the air signals, the quality of the comb filter is of no concern to you. The s-video connection carries a signal that has either already been separated or never mixed in the first place. That means that the comb filter in the display will

PSX games in Dolby Pro-Logic? King's Field? ... READ!
... "Joseph Wind" <j...@gif.com.invalid> wrote: I believe the order of connector cabling is: (good to better) Composite Video S-Video Component Video DVI/HDMI Only the last two will support HDTV. Not true. HD will also be supported on the Thomson SkyHD box over the comp-out. But will the monitor display HD when fed

Hooking up tv to computer
S-Video/Composite Channel 1 (VID IN 1) 3. Stereo Audio Channel 1 (AUD IN 1) 4. S-Video/Composite Channel 2 (VID IN 2) 5. Stereo Audio Channel 2 (AUD IN 2) PCI Card Installation Manufacturer Emuzed Model Angel Dual TV Tuner Connection type Analog and RF RF(TV) Specifications - Format NTSC Channel Support Ch. 2

NvidiaGeforce4 2 monitors 1 TV..WTF?!?!
I use a direct RGB Scart connection from the DVD to scart1 on the TV. Theres also an s-video connection to the amp but thats not really needed or used. I had a cable spare so I made the connection. The digibox is 'looped through' the DVD player via its main scart output. This gives direct RGB video from these two

Computer VGA to HDTV
So I would say that Component is better as S-Video connection tend to give 500 line+ in bandwidth whereas Composite is more like 300-400 lines. Also component can carry progressive scan if you have Plasma etc... RGB and Component are very simple arithmetic transformations (see for example

S-Video
S-VHS (and VHS for that matter) record video in component (luminance and color seperated) format. in order to use the composite output of the VCR, the VCR has to combine the two signals and then the TV gets to seperate it again. plenty of oppurtunity to muck up the signal. the S-video connection from the DVD player

black and white display on live tv
It has the S-video connection for connecting it to a TV. The display on the computer comes up fine on the TV screen, and when I start the DVD Player, the player shows. When I start the movie, the DVD screen on my TV is black while the movie shows on the screen of my laptop. Is it possible to view the movie itself

RGB vS Video
The S-Video connection keeps the all-important black and white (Y) information separate, and combines the colour difference signals into a single colour signal (C). Instead of three separate signals going to the display device, there are now two separate signals. As you would expect, combining the two colour

image quality difference between HDMI and S-VIDEO connection
You need to set it to "CLONE" for the type of dual monitor. This will have the TV display the exact thing that's on your computer monitor. Secondly, you have to have an S-Video cable connected from the S-Video jack on your TV to the S-Video jack on the back of your graphics card on your computer.

S VIDEO VIEWING THROUGH MY TV
They aren't there in the S-Video image. Try watching a kid's type animation with bright blocks of colour and look at the edges of the colours - see the moving dots on the edges via the composite connection? They're not there using the S-Video connection. One thing that WON'T be dramatically different is the overall