How do you know if a certain signal is 4:2:0 vs 4:2:2? I don't see this information listed within Lyngsat.
Which computer card are you using? I saw an old post where you were debating between getting a Twinhan or a Genpix, and both of those would work with TSREADER, and TSREADER will tell you if it's 4.2.2 or not.I was watching the GDMX mux last night on my FTA computer card and knew it was 4:2:2, but wondered if it possibly was listed anywhere.
Funny thing is that the FTA computer card never worked while a wireless Ethernet PCI card was installed in the same computer. I knew I had a good signal from the 6' dish, but the card never picked channels up. I then wondered if the antenna from the wireless card was interfering, so I removed it and ran an Ethernet cable to my computer instead. The FTA card has worked great ever since.
How do you know if a certain signal is 4:2:0 vs 4:2:2? I don't see this information listed within Lyngsat.
How do you know if a certain signal is 4:2:0 vs 4:2:2? I don't see this information listed within Lyngsat.
What in the heck is all this 4:2:x stuff about?
Thanks!
In a nutshell, 4:2:2 video works well with studio video processing, especially with overlays and everything of that nature. 4:2:0, not so well.What in the heck is all this 4:2:x stuff about?
Thanks!
In a nutshell, 4:2:2 video works well with studio video processing, especially with overlays and everything of that nature. 4:2:0, not so well.
The makeup of of 4:2:0 is that for every 2x2 pixel group, there is only one chroma pixel for the four luma. 4:2:2 doubles that to two chroma for four luma, or one chroma for every 1 high by 2 wide pixel group.
Sports feeds like to use 4:2:2 and since we know your view on sports you wouldnt have to worry much about whether a feed or channel is 4:2:2
There are channels and news feeds that are 4:2:2 but to simplify its used mainly for sports on KU