• MAC mini and lcd tv questions

    From pickles_james@pickles_james@hotmail.com to comp.sys.mac.system on Thursday, April 13, 2006 02:03:20
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.system

    Hi all, new to this group and have a few questions.
    iam gonna purchase a mac mini and a HD ready LCD TV.
    1. does the LCD TV have to have a DVI input or can i get mac mini to
    work over HDMI?
    2. Would it make any difference to viewing quality if i got 1366x768
    rather than 1920x1080 screen res.
    3. iam going to hook this whole kit up to a broadband connection for HD
    movies etc, can mac mini READ HD DVD'? ( I assume not due to the first
    HD DVD/Blueray players costing up to £1000
    4. can i get a home theatre surround system to work with all this kit
    ( i like my 5.1 surround sound)
    any help would be great
    thanks.
    james.
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  • From bobbagoose@bobbagoose@gmail.com to comp.sys.mac.system on Thursday, April 13, 2006 06:52:39
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.system

    1. DVI and HDMI are interoperable. you will need an adaptor to convert
    the DVI from the Mac to HDMI.

    2. Yes. Full 1080i/p videos will need to be scaled down to fit the
    native screen resolution. However, 720p will be displayed at full HD
    res. With viewing apps/desktop you will need to set the screen to a
    progressive scan mode to avoid flickering. Typically this will be 720p (1280*720). Unless you have a 1080p full res HDTV then you can output
    1920*1080 without flickering (you will need to pay a huge premium for
    this).

    3. No

    4. yes. The new Core Duo macminis have analogue (3.5mm) and optical
    (spdif) output.

    Hope this helps. If I am incorrect feel free to correct me.
    gary

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  • From pickles_james@pickles_james@hotmail.com to comp.sys.mac.system on Thursday, April 13, 2006 08:12:22
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.system

    what would the mac mini look like on a 1920x1080 screen compared to a
    standard monitor, better or worse?

    and the only way i could play HD movies through the mac mini is to
    Download them straight onto the mac itself, correct?

    cheers

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  • From John McWilliams@jpmcw@comcast.net to comp.sys.mac.system on Thursday, April 13, 2006 13:21:22
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.system

    pickles_james@hotmail.com wrote:
    what would the mac mini look like on a 1920x1080 screen compared to a standard monitor, better or worse?

    and the only way i could play HD movies through the mac mini is to
    Download them straight onto the mac itself, correct?

    This is an interesting thread, and I regret I can't add much at all to answering the questions. I did, however, connect my MacBookPro to my HD
    Sony (60" rear proj.) and Lightroom did fine with a slide show.

    But I ask you both to please quote enough of the previous post so one
    doesn't have to backtrack to follow. '

    --
    John McWilliams
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  • From bobbagoose@bobbagoose@gmail.com to comp.sys.mac.system on Thursday, April 13, 2006 14:18:08
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.system

    what would the mac mini look like on a 1920x1080 screen compared to a standard monitor, better or worse?

    and the only way i could play HD movies through the mac mini is to
    Download them straight onto the mac itself, correct?

    If you have a full 1080p HD screen then you will get full pixels and
    therefore full clarity. As I said before be careful with 1080i as this
    is interlaced (only drawing every other scanline in each pass) and will
    create flickering. If all you want the mini for is as a media centre
    then I would strongly suggest getting a *cough* Windows MCE PC. If you
    get a fairly high spec model you should be able to switch out the DVD
    drive for a HD-DVD/BD in 6-12 months.

    Currently the mini does not have support for HD-DVD/BD as they are both emerging technologies and BD's DRM specs have not been finalised yet.
    The core solo comes with a standard DVD-ROM/CD-RW and the core Duo
    comes with a superdrive DVD-RW/DL +-. It may be possible to upgrade the
    Mini in the future to support HD content/media, but expect to pay a
    premium (and thats if Apple even supports current gen minis with HD/BD
    drives).

    There are a small number of HD movies available in Microsoft's WMV
    format which it may be possible to view on a mini, but I haven't tried
    this yet. Search microsoft.com for info. they have T2 and some others.

    If you are certain you want a MacMini, and you want to view HD content (trailers, animations, demos etc.) downloaded from the net or on CD/DVD
    then I would recommend the Core Duo with 512 or preferably 1Gb of RAM.
    I have a core duo with the standard 512, and whilst it will play 720p
    content really well, it does occasionally struggle with 1080p when I
    have say Mail, Safari, and Azereus running for instance. I have read
    that the extra RAM should solve this, partly because the RAM is shared
    with the Video 448/64, and partly due to the overheads associated with
    running 25/30fps video @ 1920*1024.

    BTW I work for a small television company producing a variety of
    animated content/programmes which is why I know technically how this
    stuff works. I have yet to create a huge amount of HD content however,
    so I can't give you any figures for memory/processing/bendwidth etc.
    But as far as I know what I am saying is correct.

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