markm75 wrote:
> I'm seeking a way to send the video from my PC to both my 24" 1920 x
> 1200 LCD and the 1900 x 1080 HDTV in the other room..
>
> I have tried just using an HDMI splitter.. this didnt work so well..
> the video on the pc LCD had to stay at 1900x1080, which didnt look as
> good, in order for there to be any video on the HDTV.. and when i did
> view the HDTV, the video overscanned the edges of the screen and had
> to be manually "shrunk" up using the nvidia control panel, which didnt
> save to a profile.
>
> So i figured maybe if i use an HDMI or DVI switch, with remote control
> ability.. i can just switch it when in the other room (though if
> anyone is on the pc, they are out of luck)..
>
> But i dont even know if this would automatically reduce the 1920x1200
> resolution to 1900x1080 on the HDTV, through autodetection or if it
> would say "signal out of range" irregardless, in which case i'm back
> to square one and maybe just dropping the home theatre slash PC idea
> in favor of a SageHD TV box ?
>
> Does anyone know if this resolution adjustment happens automatically
> and are there any 1x2 boxes with remote ability that area say $100 or
> less..
>
> IE: i did find this one.. buts more than i was willing to spend, as i
> can get a sageHD tv box for around $200 which supposidly will pass
> TrueHD audio, DVDS and blurays (?)
> http://www.affordablehdtv.com/gefen-...l-p-21591.html
>
> Thanks in advance
This isn't exactly the same approach you had in mind, but it may offer
another solution.
Flip to page 88 here. Several modes for the dual connectors on a video
card are discussed. If you use "Dual View" mode, the two monitors can
be run at independent resolutions, and for the TV one, you may even
be able to set overscan/underscan or whatever (maybe only when using
"component" cables?). "Clone" doesn't look as useful, as it would likely
result in the same problems you have now (one monitor doesn't like the
other monitor's settings).
ftp://download.nvidia.com/Windows/91...User_Guide.pdf
If you used "Dual View", then you'd need a way to get the application to
switch the image to one monitor or the other. Still not very convenient.
I'm not sure your average movie application would be smart enough to
make two copies of the same playback (especially as there may be only
one overlay plane on the video card, and may restrict what the application
can do). There is an alternative besides overlay (VMR?), so it may still work.
The various releases of Nvidia software have different capabilities. The
above document probably corresponds to the "Classic" control panel. The
new control panel has slowly been adding back capabilities, and may still
not offer all the same options as the old control panel did.
ATI will have similar features, only an up to date manual for it may be
harder to find. The CCC manual I've got, came from a video card manufacturer
site, and not from ATI, so ATI is pretty useless in that regard.
Paul