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- Path: sparky!uunet!crdgw1!rdsunx.crd.ge.com!rdsunx!perley
- From: perley@trub.crd.ge.com (Donald P Perley)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.hardware
- Subject: Re: does this device exist?
- Message-ID: <PERLEY.92Nov10131402@trub.crd.ge.com>
- Date: 10 Nov 92 18:14:02 GMT
- References: <1992Nov6.193743.7172@sol.cs.wmich.edu> <BxD6o6.E34@fc.hp.com>
- <36799@cbmvax.commodore.com> <69221@cup.portal.com>
- Sender: usenet@crd.ge.com (Required for NNTP)
- Organization: GE Corp. R & D, Schenectady, NY 12345
- Lines: 17
- In-Reply-To: joeles@cup.portal.com's message of Tue, 10 Nov 92 01:02:12 PST
- Nntp-Posting-Host: trub.crd.ge.com
-
- In article <69221@cup.portal.com> joeles@cup.portal.com (Joel Edward Swan) writes:
-
- Transcoding baseband video to RGB won't be cheap. The unit must break the
- video into 3 descrete colors and output them. The Sunrize color splitter
- does this, but only on one color at a time. I can do it with my VideoMaster
- Genlock (transcodes Y/C and composite video as RGB, composite or Y/C) but
- that unit runs around $1000. 8-/
-
-
- And why should it be expensive? Doesn't virtually every color TV
- in the US have a circuit to break out RGB?
-
- I don't recall the brand, but I have seen RGB splitters in amiga stores
- sold to go with Digiview.
-
- --
- perley@trub.crd.ge.com
-