In that same screen, the type of Deinterlacing can be changed to Kernel, Bob(x2), etc. Try the different types and see which works for you.
-alex On Tuesday 18 October 2005 09:00 am, Dave Sherohman wrote: > On Tue, Oct 18, 2005 at 10:50:08PM +1000, Laurie Odgers wrote: > > Something to do with deinterlacing perhaps? Ive noticed that there is a > > significant difference between linear blend and the kernel deinterlacer > > when watching something fast paced like football, the kernel deinterlacer > > looks much nicer > > How do you control this? All I've noticed in the mythtv > configuration (on, IIRC, mythfrontend) is 'deinterlace video on/off', > nothing to control how it's deinterlaced. > > My particular situation is that I sometimes get double-images on my > TV which make it feel choppy. Pausing and going through it frame-by- > frame, I'll see that the image actually is doubled, with a (e.g.) 1/3 > transparent copy of something in the old position and a 2/3 > transparent copy of it in the new position. (This is most clearly > visible on animated programs, of course.) The odd thing is that > watching avi or mpg files not created by mythtv on the TV looks fine > and watching mythtv's recordings on a remote front end attached to an > LCD monitor also looks fine. It's only the combination of a myth > recording and the TV display that has this problem. I've tried > setting the frontend on the TV to both deinterlace and not > deinterlace, but it has not had any readily-visible effect on this > problem either way.
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