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Major Stutter Resolved: integrated GPU
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<blockquote data-quote="Pat Clark" data-source="post: 915989" data-attributes="member: 123421"><p>You're right, it doesn't make much sense, but it works just fine as is -- better than it ever has, and nearly perfect. It seems to me your idea would mess up the 60p channels, which have "new" data 60 times per second.</p><p> </p><p>I wonder if the wording of the "Treat as Progressive" option is misleading, and all it really means is "leave signal alone." After all, any TV could handle an interlaced signal -- perhaps not every monitor, but surely any TV.</p><p> </p><p>Or, if not that, I think its possible, since the data are digital, that the scan lines are individually addressed. This, coupled with frame and/or field markers, would allow the TV to reconstruct a full frame and display it.</p><p> </p><p>But I must say I don't know how its working, but it is.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pat Clark, post: 915989, member: 123421"] You're right, it doesn't make much sense, but it works just fine as is -- better than it ever has, and nearly perfect. It seems to me your idea would mess up the 60p channels, which have "new" data 60 times per second. I wonder if the wording of the "Treat as Progressive" option is misleading, and all it really means is "leave signal alone." After all, any TV could handle an interlaced signal -- perhaps not every monitor, but surely any TV. Or, if not that, I think its possible, since the data are digital, that the scan lines are individually addressed. This, coupled with frame and/or field markers, would allow the TV to reconstruct a full frame and display it. But I must say I don't know how its working, but it is. [/QUOTE]
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