Be glad you live in a 110V part of the world.
Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
Yes, pretty happy with 110/220. When I worked for Motorola building and deploying a STB we had a contract with a telecom in Camberra AU. We found a vendor to supply a power supply capable 50-60 HZ and 110 - 240v so they claimed. Supply worked great at 110 but in AU the supply ran so hot at 240v it would melt most things the STB sat on.. End of that vendor.
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
Small world, Canberra is where I am!
OK, so I put my previous hand-wired prototype back in the ST and it does not exhibit this gradient problem, which is good news. The difference between the boards is that the old prototype has the FPGA driving the RGB lines directly at 3.3v instead of going through a buffer. That means there's 2 possibilities, a problem with this board itself; or else a problem with these particular 74AHCT245 level converting buffers.
That's good, it shows that there's nothing inherent in the concept that can't be overcome. A hypothesis to be tested (assuming board #2 has the same problem) is that if I build one up with wire links over the buffers, it should work the same as the earlier prototype. Another hypothesis is that if I run the board in mono, it should have the same symptoms that it does in colour (since the mono signal is being routed directly to the buffer with no scandoubling or RAM activity). I haven't actually done that yet because my code changes to get BLANK to work temporarily broke mono mode. Work for tomorrow!
Pictured: prototype v2 running with the brightness and gamma turned all the way up.
OK, so I put my previous hand-wired prototype back in the ST and it does not exhibit this gradient problem, which is good news. The difference between the boards is that the old prototype has the FPGA driving the RGB lines directly at 3.3v instead of going through a buffer. That means there's 2 possibilities, a problem with this board itself; or else a problem with these particular 74AHCT245 level converting buffers.
That's good, it shows that there's nothing inherent in the concept that can't be overcome. A hypothesis to be tested (assuming board #2 has the same problem) is that if I build one up with wire links over the buffers, it should work the same as the earlier prototype. Another hypothesis is that if I run the board in mono, it should have the same symptoms that it does in colour (since the mono signal is being routed directly to the buffer with no scandoubling or RAM activity). I haven't actually done that yet because my code changes to get BLANK to work temporarily broke mono mode. Work for tomorrow!
Pictured: prototype v2 running with the brightness and gamma turned all the way up.
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
A power supply running hot is indeed a waste of (electric) potential.
And remember: Beethoven wrote his first symphony in C.
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
Sure was. Are they still in operation I hope? Spent a lot of time in Camberra, used to stay at the casino down town. People in AU are great.!!!
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
Most Australian providers are being gobbled up by the NBN. Looks like TPG have swallowed them up a few years ago.
I spent a fair chunk of last year working in Canberra's ANU at the NCI facility rolling out the new Gadi super computer and de/recomissioning the old Raijin one. Six months slog in the NCI data centre still gives me nightmares.
I'm constantly amazed at the projects you roll out, mate. Its like magic to the natives. I'd love to drop one of these into a MegaST.
I spent a fair chunk of last year working in Canberra's ANU at the NCI facility rolling out the new Gadi super computer and de/recomissioning the old Raijin one. Six months slog in the NCI data centre still gives me nightmares.
I'm constantly amazed at the projects you roll out, mate. Its like magic to the natives. I'd love to drop one of these into a MegaST.
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
So the background of TransACT, for anyone who wasn't around, was that it was going to be this awesome, amazing city-wide LAN all running on fibre-optic cables and connection everyone to businesses and to each other on a high-speed link. Local traffic was going to be unmetered and thus free! This was in the mid 90s so everyone was on 56k modems and it sounded too good to be true. Everyone who had internet in those early days wanted TransACT.
Then after it finally came into existence, they had moved the goalposts a lot and in silly directions. It was still going to be a fibre-optic connection, but most of it was dedicated to cable TV with only a tiny part of the bandwidth going towards the network connection. Also, you could no longer communicate with other subscribers - you had to buy your TransACT connection - which was already overpriced for what you got, and then you had to on top of that pay for an internet connection through an ISP - and there was no free local traffic. And even then, the price of the internet connections was as high and often even higher than they charged for the same plan on a 56k modem, which made no sense at all.
They went out of business a few times and always got propped up by government money, until they were bought by TPG, a big ISP. And that was the end of that.
At least my set-top-box worked pretty well and never caught fire once!
Then after it finally came into existence, they had moved the goalposts a lot and in silly directions. It was still going to be a fibre-optic connection, but most of it was dedicated to cable TV with only a tiny part of the bandwidth going towards the network connection. Also, you could no longer communicate with other subscribers - you had to buy your TransACT connection - which was already overpriced for what you got, and then you had to on top of that pay for an internet connection through an ISP - and there was no free local traffic. And even then, the price of the internet connections was as high and often even higher than they charged for the same plan on a 56k modem, which made no sense at all.
They went out of business a few times and always got propped up by government money, until they were bought by TPG, a big ISP. And that was the end of that.
At least my set-top-box worked pretty well and never caught fire once!
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
Awesome. I had many friends at ANU, it was one of the world's top ten universities back in the day. Although I personally went to budget-priced University of Canberra where the girls were prettieratari030 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 04, 2020 10:57 pm I spent a fair chunk of last year working in Canberra's ANU at the NCI facility rolling out the new Gadi super computer and de/recomissioning the old Raijin one. Six months slog in the NCI data centre still gives me nightmares.
I'm constantly amazed at the projects you roll out, mate. Its like magic to the natives. I'd love to drop one of these into a MegaST.
Thankyou for the support, I hope I can actually get this one finished to the point where other people can benefit from it. It seems so close now!
Re: Sidequest: VGA scan doubler
@exxos called it yet again - it was a bad connection somewhere (in one of the RAMs, I'm fairly sure)
Found when I set up monochrome mode again and discovered the problem solved. Now it's looking great again (albeit with only 2 bits for green until I fix that joint): My phone likes to put a glow around things so these photos don't represent real life
Found when I set up monochrome mode again and discovered the problem solved. Now it's looking great again (albeit with only 2 bits for green until I fix that joint): My phone likes to put a glow around things so these photos don't represent real life