Hi,
thanks for that. I'll see what I can do for the next version of SMSQmulator.
Cheers
Wolfgang
>>> Unfortunately 20kHz doesn't work for me at all.
>> Yes, it's a pity, but I can't do anything about that, it's part of the
>> Java Virtual Machine.
>
> Well, you can output 22kHz and do at least
Hi Marcel,
why do you say "movie player for QPC"? Does it require QPC specific
features?
How about the file sizes of the demo videos, wasn't there a severe
limit (maybe 32 MB if I remember correctly) on native filesystems?
Screenshot looks nice.
All the best,
Peter
On 19 Dec 2016 at 0:39,
pg...@q40.de wrote:
> why do you say "movie player for QPC"? Does it require QPC specific
> features?
No, in theory it can work on any platform, I specifically didn't do
anything QPC specific, but I haven't tested and optimized it for any
other platforms. The demo videos are encoded using Mode
This is sooo coool, Marcel :)
Per
On 19 December 2016 at 00:39, Marcel Kilgus
wrote:
> I few days/weeks ago I released a little movie player for QPC on the
> QL forums. Today I have released v2.0, which adds a real user
> interface and several more movies to the mix.
Hi,
>
> Last night I tried it out on SMSQemulator and it worked much better
> than anticipated from the get-go.
Thanks ... I think.
Anyway, if you set the frequency to 20 Khz in the config menu, (and
if the version of java used can handle that frequancy) even the sound
should play
Oh Dear.
I don't know which is worse, the fact you had a Skid Row track, or that you
had to listen to it a thousand times :)
Darren Branagh
Sent from My Android Phone.
On 19 Dec 2016 12:37, "Marcel Kilgus" wrote:
> Wolfgang Lenerz wrote:
> > Hi,
> >>
> >> Last night
Hi,
>
> Unfortunately 20kHz doesn't work for me at all.
Yes, it's a pity, but I can't do anything about that, it's part of the
Java Virtual Machine.
>
> In the end I let DirectSound do the frequency transformation, but I
> also had versions where I did the sound output at 22Khz and upsampled
>
Wolfgang Lenerz wrote:
>> Unfortunately 20kHz doesn't work for me at all.
> Yes, it's a pity, but I can't do anything about that, it's part of the
> Java Virtual Machine.
Well, you can output 22kHz and do at least a simple upsampling of the
sound. Better than not sound at all and 20Khz is not