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Real magic em8300
Real magic em8300






real magic em8300
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A software abstraction layer for video decoding such as DirectShow (1998).

REAL MAGIC EM8300 FULL

To make fullscreen full motion video mainstream, the following technologies were needed:

  • Buffered PCM audio such as a Creative Labs SoundBlaster sound card (1989).
  • A redistributable high capacity storage medium (such as CD-ROMs (Yellow Book), 1988) or a high speed network (such as satellite Internet, mid-'90s) to get the video data into the PC.
  • 15-bit color or better (late-'80s), to avoid palette issues.
  • On PCs, this is achieved either by placing the chip on the video card (such as the ATI Rage 3D, 1996), or as described by by connecting through a VGA card's high speed feature connector to access video memory directly (such as the Sigma Designs Reelmagic CD lite, 1993), or by switching from ISA to VLB (1992) or PCI (1993).
  • A high speed path between the video decoder chip and the video memory or video output.
  • Or a sufficiently fast CPU such as the Intel Pentium (1993) and a high resolution multimedia timer (I think the necessary circuitry was first incorporated in sound cards before moving to motherboard chipsets).
  • Real-time motion video decoder chips such as the C-Cube CL4000 (1993), because efficient codecs are processor-intensive.
  • An efficient motion video codec (such as MPEG-1, 1993) to make storage or transmission of digital video practical.
  • My question is, can it be pin-pointed the specific hardware/software technologies and when they went mainstream on new PC's to support this level of multimedia video? Naturally, this whole endeavor revolves around hardware bandwidth and codec's, which includes software components. I remember CD-ROM games such as "The 7th Guest" becoming popular based on these sorts of abilities, though that particular game falls short of the quality mark described above.

    REAL MAGIC EM8300 PC

    I believe that such capability became commonplace on new PC hardware around the middle of the 1990s.

    real magic em8300

    In contrast, the often-plugged aspiration was to have basically long-playing digital video on the PC at roughly the quality of a VCR / Standard-Definition Television, utilizing the full screen area, around 30 fps, and including realistic sound. Many will remember early digital videos being played in tiny windows on Windows PCs. Just turn off all the services or use something like nlite to trim it down.In the early 1990s, the new buzzword for PCs was "Multimedia", and the gold standard for multimedia performance usually talked about was "full-screen full-motion" video playback. The interface is basically click and play like you want.įor OS, winxp is fine and when configured correctly uses very little memory. Or even better might be to see if you can get the funds for something like the western digital media player that has usb port for external drives, and all the video hardware in one box.

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    I put a ATI 2600HD AGP pro in this HTPC and now it plays HD video fine because of that cards hardware decoding. Usually the real magic EM8300 cards are best.That would allow just about any old pc to run dvd quality video without problems. If you are only interested in playing back mpeg2 based files then I would look on ebay for a hardware mpeg decoder. It will drop frames if the cpu is tasked with doing much else if I use the cpu to decode video.

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    I put together a very low end HTPC for someone using a AGP based motherboard, P4 2.8Ghz and 1GB ram and while it works, it isn't ideal. The htpc would not connected to the internet.Ī 1ghz cpu just isn't going to have enough processing power to do what you want.

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    Most of them know how to use a mouse to select items so I would put it in a folders with a thumbnail of the video so they can tell which one they want to play. Then I would convert the DVDs to mpg files and copy them onto the htpc. So i was thinking of taking one of their old computers and setting it up as a HTPC and just have the output straight to the TV. But DVDs go through menus and most have a learning disability so they don't understand how to use remotes and which buttons do what. Its easy for them to play a tape, just punch it in and hit play and hope its not at the end of the tape. And they can't understand how to play DVDs. These old VCRs are breaking down and replacements are getting harder and harder to find. We have a group of children with special needs that watches movies and tv shows on VHS tapes. I'm trying to set up a HTPC for a volunteer job I do. Is there a free OS that works with a pentium 2 1ghz 512mb system that just lets you start up, open up a video folder and lets you pick mpgs and displays them on the tv? I was thinking Win XP was a bit overkill for this.








    Real magic em8300