B&O is actually a Danish brand. And their products are designed to be every bit as much a piece of posh artwork for the home as they are meant to be functional products. And they come at a very, very steep price. B&O products, even things as obsolete as CRT televisions, retain good resale value even today.neorichieb1971 wrote:I went to a B+O store the other day. No TV's from that brand were in store. I remember years ago going into the same store and seeing some lifestyle designed TV's that were really weird. I think one had curtains on it and another had a remote that could tilt its direction. Swedish are not normal people lol.
neorichieb1971 wrote:The PVM's as I stated before are older and if bought from the wrong place will cost significantly for what is a load of landfill.
Well, buying used display technology blind is nothing if it is not a bold risk, innit? But for 300, I am not that perturbed, if I were so inclined then the ad for the 1980's antique SONY profeel is still up for about 50. I reckon It could easily be mine for 150 shipped, but I am very reluctant to buy something of that size ever again.
Maybe I'll sell my XRGB-2+ and use the money to buy a 19" PVM, there are a few up for sale, but I doubt I can find anyone reputable to sell me one in Canada. But I am a affraid that the PVM's being very high end professional displays with very high TV resolution ratings might once again lack the natural lowfi CRT picture that I am used to. I wish I knew someone nearby who had one.neorichieb1971 wrote:Make sure when you buy a PVM you get one from a fellow shmupper that can testify to its performance.
I imagine it would be the easiest thing for a TV software engineer to add in as an option, problem is that there is no demand for it among the general populace which make up their target demographic, so it is not a priority, or perhaps there is not even anyone there aware of the existence of the desire among select groups.neorichieb1971 wrote:Surely a 240/480 LCD isn't that hard to make with scanlines built in?
I guess a organized write in to SONY, Samsung and other flatpanel luminaries might at least make them aware of the desire. Failing in that I wonder why, with TV's these days being essentially computers with displays built in, that no effort has been put into jailbreaking one, if you will, so as to open one up for homebrew firmware modules, such as one enabling scanlines for 240p content.
When I put up an emulator with scanlines on my LCD, next to my XM29 running the same game on actual hardware I hardly see any difference there. If this harshly sharp look with clearly defined lines is what people desire then any modern flatpanel will give you via emulation, or a on actual hardware via RGB enabled scanline generator. Of course then there is lag, but that is only an issue for a subset of games, really.