We are in the process in putting together a demo room featuring HD Video and 
Intel HD Audio (7.1 surround THX). I have the PC with the necessary Intel 
"audio" chip set and video card (1080p resolution) and the speaker system (just 
waiting for the speaker stands now).
But the issue we've run into is that the demo is also suppose to feature MS 
Vista and the AG 3.0 Video conference software and although AG 3.0 installs 
fine we're getting a pythonw.exe error when trying to enter a venue - 
"pythonw.exe has stopped working - A problem caused the program to stop working 
correctly. Windows will close the program and notify you if a solution is 
available". So far Windows has not notified notified us of any solution =-O ... 
but hopefully someone else among the AG community might ... anyone found a 
solution for this problem yet ? Apparently were not the first to have this 
problem with Vista:
http://www-unix.mcs.anl.gov/web-mail-archive/lists/ag-tech/2007/02/msg00088.html

I also experienced a problem with Bonjour - "the OS won't run the Bonjour 
service due to permissions" ..but was able to resolve this by installing a 
newer version on Bonjour.

Any help on this would be very much appreciated -- thanks -- Dan Copher






At 06:39 PM 4/11/2007, you wrote:
Hi,

HD does stand for High Definition (despite appearances?!) - It's
referring to Intel new audio architecture:
http://www.intel.com/design/chipsets/hdaudio.htm

I haven't managed to test RAT on an HD audio card as I haven't
currently got access to one - I'll see if I can find one....

I'm assuming this problem is being seen on Windows - anyone tried HD
audio on Linux?

Cheers,

Piers

On 11/04/07, Joseph Stone <stone...@umn.edu> wrote:
In what appears to be a clever marketing trick, system and soundcard
manufacturers have used the moniker "HD" and attached the words High
Definition to the letters.

It really stands for Half Duplex.  Since rat expects a chip set that can
simultaneously send out signals while receiving them, these new devices do
not get recognized. The HD devices appear to do some sort of fast switching
so that the user hears and speaks apparently at the same time.

I'll leave it to UCL folks to correct/add to what I've just said.

Joe


Joseph Stone
Senior Informatics Manager
Family Medicine Community Health, Medical School, Univ. of Minnesota
Suite 220 Dinnaken
925 Delaware St. SE
Minneapolis, MN 55414

(612) 624-3192
stone...@umn.edu


____________________________
| Dan Copher
| Systems Engineer
| NCSA at the University of Illinois  \ ACCESS-DC -  Arlington Virginia
| dcop...@ncsa.uiuc.edu

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