"Not Gimpy Anymore" <nogimpREMOV RemoveThis @msn.com> wrote in message
news:faqde.171960$cg1.16728@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
> I think it's surprising how many people even "in the industry" are
> not aware of this - at last years VESA DI conference, a Microsoft
> presenter asked the question, and I was the only one willing to
> volunteer the answer (Bob, you were "home" so probably did not
> hear the question).
No, I don't recall that one. Serves me right for not attending more
of these things in person...
I think a lot of people have unfortunately become used to the idea
that displayed imagery "should" fill the screen, based entirely on the
fact that CRT TVs traditionally overscanned (i.e., the displayed image
actually extends BEYOND the limits of the CRT screen, and the
program creators understand and allow for this, basically by making
sure that nothing of importance occupies the outer 5-10% of the
image area). What's less commonly understood is that this was in
the first place done to hide problems with the CRT technology of the
day (or at least what could be implemented at reasonable cost),
namely ragged raster edges and the inability of the TV's CRT
display to hold the image size perfectly constant (due to HV
regulation issues and so forth). Ideally, you shouldn't be running
the active image out to the edges of a CRT display, since the
image quality deteriorates quite rapidly out in the corners and extreme
edges.
Bob M.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
>> Stay informed about: LCD resolutions / aspect ratios