W A R N I N G !
W A R N I N G !
This page is full of non-facts and bullsh!t, (just like the internet and especially forums and other blogs), please do not believe entirely without exercising your intellect. Any resemblance to real things in reality is purely coincidental. You are free to interpret/misinterpret the content however you like, most likely for entertainment, but in no case is the text written on this blog the absolute truth. The blog owner and Blogger are not responsible for any misunderstanding of ASCII characters as facts. *cough* As I was saying, you are free to interpret however you like. *cough*
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Friday, June 24, 2011
Around the interwebs
"2) 1 pair Ultimate Bybee rca filters with 4 small Bybees slipstream purifiers. Connectors are Eichmann Silver bullet plugs. $300
These are meant to be connected to your interconnects, near the destination of your interconnect. For example, from your source to amp/preamp, then these are to be installed near your amp/preamp side.
The Ultimate version has a slipstream purifier on BOTH the signal AND ground connection. Excellent results o for digital audio data transmission (SPDIF from your DVD to your processor)."
These are meant to be connected to your interconnects, near the destination of your interconnect. For example, from your source to amp/preamp, then these are to be installed near your amp/preamp side.
The Ultimate version has a slipstream purifier on BOTH the signal AND ground connection. Excellent results o for digital audio data transmission (SPDIF from your DVD to your processor)."
Labels:
audio
Friday, June 17, 2011
I hate stories where there is only one lead guy and many girls
But, I like Anime adapted from Visual Novels because the stories are generally good. By that, I mean most of the Visual Novels (or text adventure games, some of them don't count as Visual Novel, but the idea... you get it) that get adapted into Anime have generally good stories, although exceptions do happen. (Because I can safely say that, for each good one that are 99 rubbishes in the industry) Note: Does not apply for Anime based on games like strategy, action, RPG, SRPG, ARPG, even if they have any amount of dating sim or sex inside. You already know the usual outcome for those. Disaster.
The good story generally outweighs the pimp-master setting, or actually in many games, it's really ultimately 1 guy 1 girl per story, just that there are many stories for the protagonist to choose. Or the ultimate style of needing to go through all or at least half of the stories to know what is going on. Think mystery/suspense adventure games, but I've seen this being used for romance stories, multiple times.
So when I see a romance story with multiple guys and multiple girls and multiple relationships, I get interested. Not the first time I've seen, and not limited to Visual Novels, but is still rare.
This may have something to do with some Anime that I may be giving my views on, because I think it is not getting the appreciation it deserves (as with every time I post my views on an Anime).
The good story generally outweighs the pimp-master setting, or actually in many games, it's really ultimately 1 guy 1 girl per story, just that there are many stories for the protagonist to choose. Or the ultimate style of needing to go through all or at least half of the stories to know what is going on. Think mystery/suspense adventure games, but I've seen this being used for romance stories, multiple times.
So when I see a romance story with multiple guys and multiple girls and multiple relationships, I get interested. Not the first time I've seen, and not limited to Visual Novels, but is still rare.
This may have something to do with some Anime that I may be giving my views on, because I think it is not getting the appreciation it deserves (as with every time I post my views on an Anime).
Labels:
Anime
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Monday, June 6, 2011
Improve your ATi / AMD graphics card's video playback quality by DISABLING all the enhancements
It happened one day (a long time ago actually), I acquired Nanatsuiro Drop's DVD creditless opening video, so when I got home I played it on my main PC with a HD5670 and SyncMaster 913V.
What I saw, was a putrid mush of ****.
It should be noted, at that point in time, my 913V was not calibrated. But that only makes the problem even more obvious.
I've seen the TV version of that video so I know what it looks like. My experience from comparing different encodes tells me how some fluctuation in color is normal, due to different tuner and tuning settings (more an analogue problem than a digital one nowadays), different broadcasted and subsequently captured raws, encoder and filter colorspace issue, and any enhancement the encoder (person) wants to add.
But even if you haven't seen the original video before, you can tell which one looks the most and least s**tty -
Four photos, with AMD video enhancements on and off, and display calibration on and off, in various combinations. +5 brightness and +25 contrast added in Photoshop as a noobish attempt to compensate for camera color response.
I'd expect some fight between 2 and 4, but 4 is closer to the original video, and 2 looks worse when big (click for 800x600). Photo 4 is with display calibration on and video enhancements off. As you can see this screen is fairly inaccurate while uncalibrated (photo 3), it is one of the earliest 19-inchers and only has a VGA input.
With an uncalibrated screen and enhancements on by default, I was greeted with the oversaturated POS of photo 1.
Fortunately I already knew that ATi / AMD cards have video enhancements on by default all along, and that it only works with MPEG2 (now also H.264 and VC-1 as long as you are using DXVA), so for all the MPEG4 ASP and AVC videos it didn't have any effect so I ignored it. But this video is MPEG2.
Speaking of oversaturation, this is what can happen with enhancements on, at least with an uncalibrated screen -
You know something is wrong when dark hair turns from being a light absorber to a light emitter.
Enhancements can be good sometimes, but they can be very bad many other times. So it should be left off by default unless the user wants it. However this is not the case with consumer video products, where upscalers, more vibrant colors, sharper edges, and motion-enhancement-whatever flood the market.
What I saw, was a putrid mush of ****.
It should be noted, at that point in time, my 913V was not calibrated. But that only makes the problem even more obvious.
I've seen the TV version of that video so I know what it looks like. My experience from comparing different encodes tells me how some fluctuation in color is normal, due to different tuner and tuning settings (more an analogue problem than a digital one nowadays), different broadcasted and subsequently captured raws, encoder and filter colorspace issue, and any enhancement the encoder (person) wants to add.
But even if you haven't seen the original video before, you can tell which one looks the most and least s**tty -
Four photos, with AMD video enhancements on and off, and display calibration on and off, in various combinations. +5 brightness and +25 contrast added in Photoshop as a noobish attempt to compensate for camera color response.
I'd expect some fight between 2 and 4, but 4 is closer to the original video, and 2 looks worse when big (click for 800x600). Photo 4 is with display calibration on and video enhancements off. As you can see this screen is fairly inaccurate while uncalibrated (photo 3), it is one of the earliest 19-inchers and only has a VGA input.
With an uncalibrated screen and enhancements on by default, I was greeted with the oversaturated POS of photo 1.
Fortunately I already knew that ATi / AMD cards have video enhancements on by default all along, and that it only works with MPEG2 (now also H.264 and VC-1 as long as you are using DXVA), so for all the MPEG4 ASP and AVC videos it didn't have any effect so I ignored it. But this video is MPEG2.
Speaking of oversaturation, this is what can happen with enhancements on, at least with an uncalibrated screen -
You know something is wrong when dark hair turns from being a light absorber to a light emitter.
Enhancements can be good sometimes, but they can be very bad many other times. So it should be left off by default unless the user wants it. However this is not the case with consumer video products, where upscalers, more vibrant colors, sharper edges, and motion-enhancement-whatever flood the market.
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