norda skrev:
2697086 jo jag har sett sönder det där klippet, riktigt bra!
Har inte riktigt bestämt mig än, vore kul att prova något nytt!
Kör xp mediacenter nu, tycker det funkar bra!
Får se hur jag gör som!
Jag kör Vista Ultimate (utvecklingslicens). Har sina fördelar men jag skulle vänta. Känns inte 100% stabilt (oväntat va??). Saknas en massa stöd när det gäller HW trots att databasen för drivrutiner är utökad enormt jämfört med XP. Tillverkare som tex HP och Nvidia saknar fortfarande drivrutiner.
Har även "hört" rykten om att Vista kommer klippa ner kvaliten på video out ifall det inte är godkänt material. Jag kan varken bekräfta eller dementera detta. Ska försöka hitta på siten där jag läste det. Det var inte hos MS...
Edit:
Här är länken:
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.txt
Urklipp:
Decreased Playback Quality
--------------------------
Alongside the all-or-nothing approach of disabling output, Vista requires that
any interface that provides high-quality output degrade the signal quality
that passes through it if premium content is present. This is done through a
"constrictor" that downgrades the signal to a much lower-quality one, then up-scales it again back to the original spec, but with a significant loss in
quality. So if you're using an expensive new LCD display fed from a high-
quality DVI signal on your video card and there's protected content present,
the picture you're going to see will be, as the spec puts it, "slightly
fuzzy", a bit like a 10-year-old CRT monitor that you picked up for $2 at a
yard sale [Note F]. In fact the specification specifically still allows for
old VGA analog outputs, but even that's only because disallowing them would
upset too many existing owners of analog monitors. In the future even analog
VGA output will probably have to be disabled. The only thing that seems to be explicitly allowed is the extremely low-quality TV-out, provided that
Macrovision is applied to it.
The same deliberate degrading of playback quality applies to audio, with the
audio being downgraded to sound (from the spec) "fuzzy with less detail"
[Note G].
Amusingly, the Vista content protection docs say that it'll be left to
graphics chip manufacturers to differentiate their product based on
(deliberately degraded) video quality. This seems a bit like breaking the
legs of Olympic athletes and then rating them based on how fast they can
hobble on crutches.