Ad
News

More than one-third of Americans using the Net to get election info

Published on October 27, 2006

According to a recent poll conducted by the Associated Press and America Online (AOL), 35% of all Americans are going online to become more informed about the upcoming election. When looking just at people who are likely to vote, according to the poll, that number is even higher, at 43%. Read more

Americans favor news broadcast over YouTube citizen video news

Published on December 20, 2006

A recent Zogby poll showed that most Americans still like the regular evening news broadcast over citizen video news reports posted on YouTube. Citizen news reports are basically where a regular Joe records a news event with a small camcorder or even a cellphone camera. However in the 25 to 34 demographic, one out of four would watch citizen videos over regular broadcasts. Read more

Real-time Traffic Information To Become Key Feature For Navigation, Says ABI Research

Published on December 10, 2007

Real-time traffic information services will reach more than 83 million paid or registered users worldwide by 2012, according to a new study from ABI Research. Read more

Survey Sheds Light On Habits Of US TV Viewers

Published on March 10, 2008

Americans spend a lot of time using PVRs and gaming with many having installed home theaters, according to an ABI Research online survey of 1002 American consumers in December 2007, aimed at discovering how US residents view their TV service providers, what technologies and programming they use, and their price sensitivity towards available service offerings. Read more

Latest Reviews & Articles

GeForce GTX 295 Performance: Previewed

Published on December 18, 2008

After a frustrating second half of 2008, Nvidia is looking to start the new year off by reclaiming its single-card performance crown. We got our hands on an engineering sample GeForce GTX 295 to give you a taste of what you can expect in two weeks. Read more

Phenom Recycled: Athlon X2 7000-Series

Published on December 15, 2008

Just a couple of weeks before the introduction of its 45 nm Phenom II, AMD introduces a new dual-core chip. The Athlon X2 7000-series is basically a 65 nm Phenom with two active cores, but with the full L2 and L3 cache memory. Read more

Does Saving Power Mean Hurting Performance?

Published on December 15, 2008

Modern processors are capable of switching into power-efficient modes to save power when they’re idle, and an increasing number of motherboards offer dynamic features for the same purpose. Yet, the benefits come at a price. Read more

Four Full Tower Cases From $150 To $600

Published on December 15, 2008

With Intel's Core i7 920 looking like a solid overclocking play, we wanted to find the right full-tower case for our test benches. ABS, Antec, Cooler Master, and Thermaltake battle it out for chassis supremacy. Read more

  Tom's Hardware Forums » Graphic & Displays » ATI » Poll (please): Time-shifting Performance
 

Poll (please): Time-shifting Performance




Word :   Username :  
 
Bottom
Author
 Thread : Poll (please): Time-shifting Performance
 
More Information

Archived from groups: alt.comp.periphs.videocards.ati (More info?)

 

Hello,

Am a programmer. Hadn't bought a pc in a long while. Was making do
with a 233mhz Pentium. Started browsing ebay one day, and had been
thinking about, and so I embarked on building a system. Point is, had
to pretty much take a crash course in the newer hardware out there, and
of course, this included the video card, a 128MB ATI All-In-Wonder 9600,
in a 4X AGP slot (see system specs below).

I'm recording television on an Ultra2 SCSI RAID 0 array consisting of 9
WD9150 drvies connected to a 3 channel Mylex 1164p.

My question is, what sort of time-shifting performance are people
getting with their set-ups? Like, in terms of playing back, and
recording, and moving around (rewind, fastforward), and getting
noticible framedrops in what's being recorded while doing the moving
around? What's the longest recording duration people are getting, while
still getting good performance while moving around?

I'm getting good performance (no frame drops that I can see) when moving
around while recording, but with playback close to the beginning of the
recording -- the further out playback is toward the end of the recording
(beyond a certain recording duration), the worse recording quality (more
frame drops). You might think this is due to track posistion, but I've
experimented with slicing the array up into several equal sized
partitions, and performance is not dependent on which partition I use.

Doesn't seem like this could be a function of memory buffer.

Over all, I'm guessing I'm getting pretty good performance. That is, I
don't think what I'm seeing is neccessarily unusal. I wonder though, if
there's a way to make it better; perhaps maybe there's a shortcomming in
the tv software (stock from ATI card).

The system consists of:

Tyan s2462 (the first dual amd board)
2 1.2Ghz Athlon MPs
WD2000 HDD
512MB PC2100 (EEC, DDR)
Mylex 1164P 3 channel Ultra2 SCSI RAID adapter (64bit, 33mhz)
9 WD9150 SCSI HDD array
Viewsonic E70 Monitor (running at 100mhz refresh, next to lowest
resolution)

Bryan

Related Product

Register or log in to remove.

More Information

Archived from groups: alt.comp.periphs.videocards.ati (More info?)

 

Man, this must be like, the most unsucessful poll in history :).

Can anyone tell me, discuss with me, ati tivo performance? I found stuff
googling on time shifting, but strangely, there are no performance
specifications in terms of what I described below. Be interesting to
compare with non-pc computer implementations too -- black box television set
hardware stuff.

Bryan

Bryan Hoover wrote:

> Hello,
>
> Am a programmer. Hadn't bought a pc in a long while. Was making do
> with a 233mhz Pentium. Started browsing ebay one day, and had been
> thinking about, and so I embarked on building a system. Point is, had
> to pretty much take a crash course in the newer hardware out there, and
> of course, this included the video card, a 128MB ATI All-In-Wonder 9600,
> in a 4X AGP slot (see system specs below).
>
> I'm recording television on an Ultra2 SCSI RAID 0 array consisting of 9
> WD9150 drvies connected to a 3 channel Mylex 1164p.
>
> My question is, what sort of time-shifting performance are people
> getting with their set-ups? Like, in terms of playing back, and
> recording, and moving around (rewind, fastforward), and getting
> noticible framedrops in what's being recorded while doing the moving
> around? What's the longest recording duration people are getting, while
> still getting good performance while moving around?
>
> I'm getting good performance (no frame drops that I can see) when moving
> around while recording, but with playback close to the beginning of the
> recording -- the further out playback is toward the end of the recording
> (beyond a certain recording duration), the worse recording quality (more
> frame drops). You might think this is due to track posistion, but I've
> experimented with slicing the array up into several equal sized
> partitions, and performance is not dependent on which partition I use.
>
> Doesn't seem like this could be a function of memory buffer.
>
> Over all, I'm guessing I'm getting pretty good performance. That is, I
> don't think what I'm seeing is neccessarily unusal. I wonder though, if
> there's a way to make it better; perhaps maybe there's a shortcomming in
> the tv software (stock from ATI card).
>
> The system consists of:
>
> Tyan s2462 (the first dual amd board)
> 2 1.2Ghz Athlon MPs
> WD2000 HDD
> 512MB PC2100 (EEC, DDR)
> Mylex 1164P 3 channel Ultra2 SCSI RAID adapter (64bit, 33mhz)
> 9 WD9150 SCSI HDD array
> Viewsonic E70 Monitor (running at 100mhz refresh, next to lowest
> resolution)
>
> Bryan


  Tom's Hardware Forums » Graphic & Displays » ATI » Poll (please): Time-shifting Performance

Go to:
 

Google Ads