timwhit
Hairy Aussie
I haven't touched it today. We'll see about tomorrow.
if anyone has a good source for 4k video I would be interested.
Do you have access to usenet?
I haven't touched it today. We'll see about tomorrow.
if anyone has a good source for 4k video I would be interested.
Nope. But I should put some time in for that. Just haven't bothered to date.
7x00 ATI GPUs have hardware support for decoding and displaying 4k video, which means the other, wrong-er people probably can with current GPUs as well.
For the rest I'd probably look at a low power i3 and run XBMC.
I didn't think S3 Graphics made modern graphics cards any more?
It looks like the RGB stripe is reversed from how Windows is expecting it to be. That may cause the subpixel rendering to be incorrect.
I'd try the built-in ClearType adjustments in Fonts (Win7) or the tools (WinXP, Vista) first.I would think you would want to turn off ClearType.
That's both good and bad.
Not saying you're wrong, but you might as well get used to it. We won't be seeing special resolutions for monitors that aren't used in TVs much in the future.It looks like that crappy 16:9 ratio. :tdown:
Can I get a list of resolutions that my Intel graphics support? No. A list of resolutions is not available. The resolutions that are selectable on your computer will depend on many factors including but not limited to:
Check with your computer and display manufacturers to find out the supported resolutions of the computer and display. If you are using multiple displays in clone or duplicate mode, you can only select a resolution that is supported by all displays.
- The chipset or processor in your system
- Which display port you are using
- How your computer manufacturer has configured your computer
- Your display or monitor capabilities
- If your display or monitor is plug and play
- If your display or monitor is in single mode, clone, or extended desktop mode.
IIRC, Haswell has 4K support... (IvyBridge had 4K support, but not on HDMI)
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7007/intels-haswell-an-htpc-perspective
IIRC, Haswell has 4K support... (IvyBridge had 4K support, but not on HDMI)
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7007/intels-haswell-an-htpc-perspective
Now, for the bad news: If you are hoping to drive the ~$1300 Seiki Digital SE50UY04 50" 4K TV (the cheapest 4K TV in the market right now), I would suggest some caution. Our build tried to drive a 3840x2160 @ 30 Hz resolution to the Seiki TV on boot, but the HDMI link never got locked (the display would keep flickering on and off). The frequency of locking was inversely proportional to the HDMI cable length. The NVIDIA GT 640s that we tested in the same setup with the same cables and TV managed to drive the 4K Quad FHD resolutions without problems. We were able to recreate the situation with multiple Seiki units.
At this juncture, we are not sure whether this is an issue with the ASRock Z87E-ITX board in particular or a problem for all Haswell boards. Intel suggested that the HDMI level shifter used by ASRock might not be up to the mark for 4K output, but that doesn't explain why the output to the Sony 84" TV worked without issues. In short, if you have a Seiki 4K TV and want to use a PC to drive that, we would suggest using a NVIDIA GT 640 or greater / AMD 7750 or greater for now. We will update this section as and when we reach closure on the issue with ASRock / Intel.
My setup (A10-5800K and F2A85V-PRO) supports up to 4096x2160@60Hz through DisplayPort. DVI is limited to 2560x1600@60Hz, and HDMI is limited to standard 1920x1080@60HzI'm even less familiar with the AMD options, and their website isn't giving me anything.
If P5 knows of another issue, I'd appreciate a link.According to our sources, the new C6/C7 power states on the Haswell-Shark Bay platform will require the system power supply to be able to maintain a minimum current load of 0.05Amps on the CPU exclusive 12V2 rail (0.6W).Older or bargain basement power supply units may be unable to achieve this, and might become unstable or trigger a UVP/OVP shutdown once the system enters the C6/C7 power states. This is because the previous ATX12V v2.3 design guidelines for Ivy Bridge and its predecessors only called for a minimum load of 0.5 Amps on the CPU power rail, hence a less sophisticated internal feedback loop/protection could be used in older or cost-reduced offerings, which will not support the new standards.
Read more: http://vr-zone.com/articles/is-your-power-supply-ready-for-haswell/19848.html#ixzz2VPE7SS3b
You’ll notice that I didn’t mention any of the aggressive platform power optimizations in my sections on Haswell power management, that’s because they pretty much don’t apply here. The new active idle (S0ix) states are not supported by any of the desktop SKUs. It’s only the forthcoming Y and U series parts that support S0ix.
If P5 knows of another issue, I'd appreciate a link.
Although the demo ran at 30Hz, ASUS claims it has a display setting that will allow 60Hz operation using DisplayPort.