Manni wrote: ↑Sat Jul 29, 2023 7:11 pm
However, nVidia has stupidly decided to stop supporting 3D MVC in their drivers, so if you want 3D playback support, AMD GPUs are the only choice for a fairly recent GPU.
I had to look it up to know that MVC 3D is not Motion Vector Compensation but rather Multi-view Video Coding, which is a way of reducing file sizes for 3D streams because data is shared by both views. So does that mean you can't watch 3D movies on Nvidia at all anymore? I've got at least one 3D movie that I've been planning to watch, and now I'm curious if it will even work on my 2080.
Manni wrote: ↑Sat Jul 29, 2023 7:11 pm
Paul, you simply passthrough HDR to your display because I assume you have a bright enough flat panel. Projector owners with 100nits peak brightness need advanced tonemapping systems (or people with not so bright panels, such as older OLEDs), and that's where madVR / JRVR make a huge difference. Sometimes I wish I had an LG G3 77". In fact I might decide to replace my projector with one. It would definitely make my life simpler.
I've been watching everything on my projector for the past year and a half. I don't have a lot of HDR material, and while the projector supports the format it doesn't necessarily do it justice. I've got it dialed in well enough that I enjoy pretty much everything I watch, but I haven't had the time to mess around with tone mapping. Ignorance is bliss.
Manni wrote: ↑Sat Jul 29, 2023 7:11 pm
Some people make a HTPC that's not connected to the internet and only does that. That way, OS, GPU drivers and software are "frozen" to a working state, and you can use that forever. I would probably recommend Windows 8.1 in that case, with a 2080ti or similar, as you might be able to find old drivers that work and support 3D as well (if that matters to you).
My mother is quite advanced in age, and was never technically savvy to start with. I've always been the one maintaining her PC's, and I was tired of cleaning up not just virii and malware but all the little plugins she allowed to install in her browser. In search of a solution, a few years ago I built her a fresh PC and installed
Faronics Deep Freeze, which is software that essentially restores the computer to the saved image on EVERY boot. You do have to unfreeze the PC to install any updates, but I have her documents on a separate non-frozen partition, and the solution has worked perfectly for years. No matter what happens (and yes, stuff has happened), a reboot has always saved the day.
I've been exploring this more with my pinball venture. In my last pinball machine build, I used a PC Startup/Shutdown controller that remotely monitors if the PC is on or off, and based upon you flipping a switch it gracefully starts or shuts down the PC. It mostly works, but I found that sometimes transient voltage spikes in the pinball machine would cause voltage sags and trigger the controller to shut down the PC in the middle of a game, or even start up the machine unattended if the power flickered. I discussed this with a friend who has brought several pinball machines to market, and he said these controllers are nice for development, but are simply not suitable for production. His "home-run" point was that sometimes machine operators will simply flip the power breaker to a whole room of pinball machines (and arcades) at night, and flip it back on in the morning. That would bypass the security of the shutdown controller, so instead you have to make your PC bulletproof.
So I've been looking at solutions again, and primarily wanted something lower cost than Deep Freeze. The general concept is referred to as "rebooting to restore", and "bulletproof", so if you want to google for solutions those are good terms to search. I did find a free solution that works well,
Horizon DataSys' Reboot Restore Rx. For free I really can't complain, though I'm not quite sure it lives up to my desires for a pinball machine. The freeware version shows a splashscreen on bootup, which looks like branding on my pinball machine (a paid Pro version has a stealth option). You can only activate/deactivate it from an Admin account, which I guess is okay since you're freezing the PC anyway, but it would be nice to have the PC boot into a streamlined standard user account instead of full-rights Admin. And to my perception it seems to boot slower than Deep Freeze. I've downloaded a trial of Deep Freeze so I can do back to back comparisons of both solutions to decide if Deep Freeze is worth the $50. The paid version of Reboot Restore Rx Pro is also about $50, but I think the only benefit for me would be the stealth boot option.
So if I was trying to freeze a HTPC from updates, I'd certainly be looking at a tool like these. It does take a bit more effort to make sure your data is written to a non-frozen area (Reboot Restore Rx Pro can let you define non-frozen folders in addition to partitions which is nice).
Something else I'm starting to experiment with for my pinball machines is lightweight Windows installs. This past year I kept seeing news reports about Tiny10 and Tiny11, which are massively cut-down versions of Windows that run with very minimal resources. Tiny10/11 seem a bit too extreme for my purposes, but the idea of a Windows install without all the unnecessary bloat, and with better performance (latency is a killer for pinball machines) really drew me in. There seem to be a lot of competing solutions, but most really push the limits and break some functionality. I settled on
Ghost Spectre Win10 Superlite, which significantly reduces the bloat without breaking much.
The first thing I noticed after installing Ghost Spectre Win10 Superlite is that they have completely turned off Windows updates. In fact, it is so turned off that you can't even manually get updates. So if you
hate MicroSoft forcing updates down your throat, here is a permanent solution. There are also install options that let you choose whether or not to include Windows Defender and the special Superlite SE versioin which has the StartIsBack start menu replacement, so you can have your Win7 style start menu again (and it is AWESOME).
This has all been in the past week, so I've yet to do any real testing with it. I haven't even loaded up my pinball software, nor tried any HTPC software, so for all I know it doesn't work well. But from what I've seen so far, I really like it, and I fully expect it to work.
Anyway, I know that was a long post, but I've never seen any of this discussed on this forum before. It's mostly new to me, perhaps new to you too. If any of you want to explore and talk about this more, it'd probably be good to start a new thread on this forum in the General Discussion area.