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| ViewSonic NextVision 6 Video Processor | ||||||||||
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| ViewSonic NextVision 6 Video Processor From Amazon (US) for $25.99 Small stand-alone or remote office firewall and VPN endpoint w/10 user License From TechDepot for $228.95 |
Very nice! (Rating: 4.00) Review : I bought this, hooked it up to my 19" LCD monitor, and immediately pushed the old 27" TV tube out of the room (Bigger is not always better). Side by side, the color on the monitor was much better by default than any amount of adjustment on the TV could achieve. I cranked the resolution up, and text on the screen looks like it's actually in a font, readable and all! (TiVo output is amazing, but even all the text in commercials and credits and such are so much better.) DVD looks even better. I can't compare this with HDTV because, well, if I could afford that, I wouldn't have bought this. Minor annoyances: It remembers most settings but not my closed captions on (and the CC is placed horribly and too small). You won't find Viewsonic on any universal remote codes; I wrote to the company and they advised me that I must buy a learning remote. Too bad my TiVo remote can't learn... gonna to be hard to find something workable enough to replace my TiVo remote. Can't afford the Pronto right now so I'm just dealing with multiple remotes. VHS tapes that play through the projector (and LCD monitor) composite port play all jumbled through the N6. Not a big deal, I will run a cable to the projector. On the other hand, playstation(composite) games seem a bit more stable through the N6. Progressive scan video(which the PJ can handle natively) looks as good or maybe better when sent as an upscaled RGB signal. Non progressive video looks similar to the projector, and is above average. Overall this product is above average for the pricepoint and what I am using it for. The TV looks much better than what I was getting out of my VCR, and I also have one cable to the projector for my computer, composite, svideo , component. The setup is relatively simple, however, the end result is very unpleasant. There is a special cable provided, which is designed to interface with your graphics card output and feed into the unit's RGB input. You then connect your normal VGA cable out of the unit's RGB output and into your monitor, thus establishing a pass-through. However, the resulting output signal is highly degraded and of such poor quality by virtue of this cable/pass-through combination that your computer graphics suddenly look like doo-doo. Forget the TV part, because you've just hosed your computer graphics! Now, in my case, my IBM C220p monitor has dual inputs. So, I said, "Forget it!" to this whole pass-through business and I simply connected the unit's output to my IBM C220p monitor's second input. Unfortunately, the aforementioned special cable provided is not useable for this purpose. Just as well, since it's a piece of junk. So, I had to drop another $30 on a decent VGA cable to make this connection. The resulting TV signal was very acceptable (with the TV signal source being standard cable via coax), however I dunno if I would call it 'high definition'. You cannot sit too close to the screen without seeing some sort of 'digital smear'. Since my monitor is a 22", I can kick back on the bed and watch TV but this may be more of a problem with a smaller monitor or if you had plans on watching the TV from directly in front of your computer. Anyway, I run my monitor at 1600x1200 resolution. The NextVision 6 touts 1280x1024 resolution. I tried different combinations of monitor/ NextVision 6 resolutions and found that if I kept my monitor at 1600x1200 and ran the NextVision 6 at 1024x768 I got the best picture. Why? Who knows. But you do have to play around with both the monitor/ NextVision 6 resolutions and the NextVision 6 brightness/contrast settings to really find the optimal settings. Patience is required! The remote control, from which most of the functions are accessed, is, as others have noted, a pain in the rear. Some of the buttons respond to a lighter touch than others. To scan up/down through the channels you had better be able to squeeze this punk with all your might to get it to actuate! I have to hold it between my thumb on the bottom and middle finger on the top/button to apply sufficient pressure. I may opt to get a digital cable box in order to use it as the tuner/remote, which will leave the NextVision 6 to function simply as the means to convert the cable signal to a computer-compatible signal. Another expense - ugh. A lot of caveats here, folks. Certainly, if I did not have a dual-input monitor, the NextVision 6 would have been returned as totally unacceptable. However, since I was able to get it up and running to a truly acceptable level via the procedure outlined above, I am well-pleased with the TV signal. Of course, I cannot watch TV while working on my computer since I have the unit's input on a completely separate monitor input from my computer, but no biggie. I just A/B between them with the monitor selector switch on my IBM. In the final analysis, I was able to accomplish what I started out to achieve, which was to watch TV on my IBM C220p monitor. Yeah! Oh, one more problem: When I am not using the unit I have to unplug the audio cable (which runs from my sound card's audio-out to the unit's audio-in) because it generates a hum in my speakers. No doubt the shielding on this cable is poor - I may replace it with a higher-quality cable. More $! As far as hooking up an external DVD player, I haven't tried it. I use Power DVD 5 on my computer, which is outstanding, so no need to use the NextVision 6 for that. If I want to play console games (X-Box, Game Cube), I'll stick with my 35" Sony TV. Maybe I'll hook up a VCR, which should work fine. All in all, unless you have a dual-input monitor, plenty of patience and want to spring for a second decent VGA cable, forget this unit. Otherwise, as I said, I have achieved a very decent TV viewing experience on my monitor. After I gave up on the Gamecube, I tried my PS 2 and my cable TV. Same results. I even called Viewsonic tech support and got some guy that didn't know his @ss from a hole in the ground - I knew more than he did! Anyway I can't see paying this much for a sub-par product. Stay away from this one, you all have been warned! |
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| ViewSonic NextVision 6 Video Processor | ||||||||||
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