2006-11-16, 09:31 AM
I've now tried every option on the Purevideo decoder and it's deinterlaced no matter what I do.
I'm not sure what nj2112 means by "you have to deinterlace with current Nvidia hardware". I know GBPVR can display it interlaced, because if I use the Cyberlink decoder set to "Force Weave" then it displays it interlaced. Everything stops looking like it was shot on film and it goes back to looking like normal TV with smooth pans and smooth graphics scrolls/tickers etc.
But, the picture is sometimes "stoppy" with this decoder. VMR9 (rather than VMR9-custom) works the best, but if the aspect ratio of the TV picture is not 16:9 the picture shrinks to the corner of the screen displaying hash everywhere else (I know this problem is discussed elsewhere).
I also don't understand why selecting "hardware acceleration" makes the picture more jerky for both Purevideo and Cyberlink. My "stoppy" picture problem is presumably not related to cpu power (cpu is at about 30%) but something else, I am not sure what.
Thanks for all help so far.
I'm not sure what nj2112 means by "you have to deinterlace with current Nvidia hardware". I know GBPVR can display it interlaced, because if I use the Cyberlink decoder set to "Force Weave" then it displays it interlaced. Everything stops looking like it was shot on film and it goes back to looking like normal TV with smooth pans and smooth graphics scrolls/tickers etc.
But, the picture is sometimes "stoppy" with this decoder. VMR9 (rather than VMR9-custom) works the best, but if the aspect ratio of the TV picture is not 16:9 the picture shrinks to the corner of the screen displaying hash everywhere else (I know this problem is discussed elsewhere).
I also don't understand why selecting "hardware acceleration" makes the picture more jerky for both Purevideo and Cyberlink. My "stoppy" picture problem is presumably not related to cpu power (cpu is at about 30%) but something else, I am not sure what.
Thanks for all help so far.