Podcasts about matrox

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Best podcasts about matrox

Latest podcast episodes about matrox

Historia de los Viciojuegos
EP24 - Tarjetas gráficas: Nvidia, Ati/AMD y compañía

Historia de los Viciojuegos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 19:55


Mañana se lanzan las nuevas gráficas de Nvidia, las RTX serie 5. Qué mejor momento para repasar en 20 minutos cómo los videojuegos fueron los culpables de la creación de las tarjetas gráficas y cómo estas evolucionaron, hasta incluir IA (inteligencia artificial), a medida que lo hicieron los juegos. Nvidia, Ati, AMD, S3, Matrox, Cirrus, Trident... En solo 20 minutos te cuento toda su historia.

AVNation Specials
Opening Up The Walled Garden With Matrox | The Road To ISE 2025

AVNation Specials

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2025 7:48


We're coming back to Barcelona for one of the biggest trade shows for the AV industry. Integrated Systems Europe 2025 comes to the Fira from February 4-7 in Spain, and we're on the path to see what innovative solutions we can expect to see.We are joined by Matrox Senior VP of Sales and Marketing Alberto Cieri about what they will have in store at E350 in Hall 5. We also talk about the 'walled garden' in AV systems and what they are doing to open networks through their solutions.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Rants & rAVes
Rants & rAVes Episode 1360: Matrox Video Bring the Industry's First AV-over-IP Gateway to InfoComm — Dubbed Vion

Rants & rAVes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2024


Sixteen:Nine
Rowan Brunger, Amino

Sixteen:Nine

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2024 36:25


The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT Set top boxes have long been looked at, theoretically at least, as single-purpose devices that would do nicely as digital signage media players, but it's fair to say a lot of software company developer and support teams have painful memories of trying to use consumer devices from China as Android-based players. They weren't reliable in terms of performance, or even in terms of what showed up from shipment to shipment. So what if a company that was expressly in the business of commercial-grade set top boxes for the pay TV and cable markets got into digital signage? That's the deal with a UK company called Amino, which now has two lines of business - pay TV and pro AV applications like digital signage. These are devices that are engineered to last for five or six years, and in a lot of cases, they are happily ticking away for a decade and longer. High reliability and remote management are inherent in the product design, so meeting that common pro AV demand was largely automatic. I had a good chat with Rowan Brunger, Amino's UK-based Sales Director, about the hardware, how the company goes to market, and what's involved if software companies and solutions providers want to add Amino devices as a hardware option. Subscribe from wherever you pick up new podcasts. TRANSCRIPT David: Rowan, thank you for joining me. I bumped into you last year and basically said, what do you guys do? Cause I'd never heard of you and we'd intended to do a podcast and finally got around to it. So for those people who don't know the company, what are you all about?  Rowan Brunger: Thanks, David. Thanks for having me on. So yeah, great to be here. We are a company called Amino and we've been around for about 25 years. So we have two sides to our business. Primarily, we've been a set top box manufacturer within the pay TV world and in the last few years, we've made a move to expand our enterprise TV and digital signage side of the business which is rapidly growing some momentum in terms of those 25 years we've been around, we've probably got 25 million devices in circulation and we've got quite a compelling device management system that we've tweaked from our experience in the pay TV world brought over to the pro AV arena for managing the states of media devices.  David: So when you say pay TV, you basically in the context of what North Americans would understand that basically means cable TV.   Rowan Brunger: Yeah, cable TV. So tier one, tier two, satellite providers where we would typically either have an Amino box or we'd OEM a box for the actual operator. So we're used to selling in big numbers to operators and what really differentiated us in that market which we're using in this one is the remote device management. So as you can imagine, if we're sending hundreds of thousands of boxes out, we want it to be relatively zero touch from the consumer's environment. We want them to plug the cables in and we do the rest remotely. So that's really what spawn orchestrate products, which is our device management platform that we've tweaked and made more applicable to the pro IV market to manage our media players. David: When you opened up the digital signage/enterprise TV market, was that based on inbound requests, Hey, we would really like to use a set top box. Do you support this market or there may be multiple answers but I'm curious if you kind of looked at where linear TV or cable TV was going, given streaming and the way that was bubbling up and realized, okay, we needed to, we need to open up a new market.  Rowan Brunger: I guess a combination of the various different scenarios you've given there. I mean, it's key to say we've always had a foot within the digital signage and enterprise video world. There's amino products that have been out there for sort of 10 years plus. I guess one of the main alliances partners we had in the past was Triple Play. So we manufactured a lot of the endpoints for Triple Play, Vitech and some of the IPTV streaming guys. So we've got loads of boxes out there in circulation and they're coming up for renewal or people wanting to upgrade to 4k, et cetera.  So that gives us a natural pull off. Okay, let's look at this market in isolation rather than just bolting onto our existing business. And then there's actually looking at the experience that we've gained in the pay TV world which has become a very competitive environment to be in. We can take a lot of that experience and truly add some value within the pro AV space with the gravitas of products and devices that we've managed previously and importantly, bringing over our video expertise onto the media player, rather than just looking at signage. We've done well where we integrate the two and we're finding a lot of customers are wanting both of them to run side by side on one device. So we can pull the huge expertise we have in enterprise video and actually put it on the same device next to, for instance, the CMS platform,  David: The markets and the use cases are, in some respects, very similar in terms of both needing very high quality of service. Like the stuff can't go down, right? Rowan Brunger: Sure. Yeah. We look at that from a number of different angles in terms of the physical player itself is truly enterprise grade, steel case designed to work in all environments 24 seven and some would argue we've even over engineered it. I mean, we've literally got boxes that have been running 24 seven in the field for 10 or 12 years solid and they're still displaying every single hour of the day.  But then there's the actual total robustness of the system and that's the inevitably when something does go wrong and things obviously do go wrong, the ability to fix that very quickly and also the ability to make sure the ongoing security and updates of that device are easy to get onto it, is as important as it running really. David: Yeah, I would say any number of CMS software companies in the industry have only in the last few years sort of realized the importance of remote device management, whereas it would have been inherent in what you do right from the start, right?  Rowan Brunger: Yeah, it's absolutely an upfront thought in where we've come from. And inevitably like a lot of things, you only realize how much you need something when you don't have it and when there's a problem. So certainly a lot of the signage projects that were involved with it, it's not their first signage project at all. They're learning from the deployments they've already made and what the pinch points were and what the really painful bits about it. And I think we're in a world now where people are taking their signage a lot more seriously with a big emphasis and cost push to get people back to the high street. For instance, when we're looking at retail, it's not just a tick box, we have a signage system in place. It's got to be absolutely robust. You've got to be able to rely on it and certainly, in times where people are paying to have their content advertised within the stores or the settings, they want to know it's actually been on the screen.  David: So you're competing in a few ways with different kinds of companies. You've got the consumer/prosumer android set top boxes that have come over from Shenzhen or whatever. You've got special purpose media play out boxes like a bright sign box and then you've got companies like SPINX who have their own box and other companies that have their own boxes and then you have PCs. So how do you kind of position yourself?  Rowan Brunger: It's a really good question. So, if I cover the first section early on, I'll probably include system on chip in that as well. So we've got a system on chip users, people have realized that there's value in having a player but maybe not as necessarily selected. One that hits all their objectives, I'm sure we say and then we've got the likes of the guys that do really high end boxes with multiple outputs. We've liked to keep this really simple, we have two products in our portfolio, for instance, we have a POE model and we have a Wifi model. So we keep it really simple. It's at a price point where we're stretching the people from the cheap consumer devices and the system on chip operators but add enough value to make that extra investment to move towards an enterprise grade player but we're underneath a lot of our true competitors that you know do fit for purpose signage players because we don't try and do everything. So I'll give you an example of that. We like to partner with specialists in areas that aren't familiar to us. So if somebody needs a four output player, we've got a partnership with the likes of Matrox to give you that. So those guys specialize in multiple output play, cards and players, we feed into it. But what that gives the customer is one platform for pretty much whatever they want to do. So our device management and the reliability is right up there with the top end competitors. But we've got a really simplistic view and what our customers like is no matter what they're displaying or what they're using the player for, it's the same player that does it all. So we've got one customer that has probably six use cases for our player within their stores. So a large rollout of about 650-700 stores in the UK and they're doing multiple things with it but they know it's a H 200 player,  that is just programmed in different ways for those different use cases and they really liked that from a maintenance point of view. So we've kept things really simple. We are definitely a step up and a professional grade player to challenge the lower end operators in the market and in terms of the higher end guys, I think we're hitting a price point. They can't, so we can get mass adoption from our product and we've got the right partnerships in place to cover all use cases with the guys that lead the industry in those areas. David: So for the age 200 player. If I'm buying, like 10 of them, what roughly in U. S. dollars would be the cost?  Rowan Brunger: So well, I'm doing a conversion in my head.  David: Well, give me, EU or sterling.  Rowan Brunger: Yeah, so we've got a package to trade within Europe that's about 240 pounds. Okay. What are we at? Just over 300 and that's a full two year package of enhanced support, premium device management software on the player itself. The player itself is around 200 on its own with various different options. So it hits a price point if you want to power four screens; for instance, in a video wall, it actually becomes price. It prices itself well enough that you could actually put a player on each of those screens, run it as a video wall, or run them individually and have that flexibility. So you're not just doing one or the other, yet you're still coming in at probably less than a quad head player that would powerful screens,  David: Yeah, and it's interesting. By standardizing on just one box for a whole bunch of different use cases, you could keep a spares pool without having to think, okay, I need two spares of these and two spares of those, and so on. You just have five on the shelf that you can pull off if you need to. Rowan Brunger: Exactly that. I mean the scenario I just gave you before, they're even looking at running just some simple audio or some simple HTML pages, just because they like the simplicity that everything is powered by exactly the same thing.  David: You mentioned that you've had stuff in the field for 10 years. Do you have a rated operating life?  Rowan Brunger: Well, the chipset has changed, which has sort of adapted that slightly, and then you've obviously got the provisions of using flash memory but the products that we have in the field have normally been programmed to do one thing, from the offset. So, quite often, decoding video streams, so they haven't really been updated, and that's why they've been running for 10 or 12 years plus. They're designed and warranted to run for, you know, the standard sort of five or six years, but they've become so robust that people have just left them in cause they're working.  We've got an airport with 2000 of the units in, and it's only because they want to change to full grade that they even thought about upgrading them. They've been running in excess of 10 years in that airport. David: So with the build for these units, if I have 500 of them and I decide, okay, I'm expanding, I'm an airport, I'm expanding a new terminal. I need 500 more. Is it going to be a different box at this point, or would that even matter? Rowan Brunger: The H200 has been around for about two years now, it really depends on when those proxies were deployed but the older boxes that we have in the sort of thousands out there, aren't supported anymore because they're well over 10 years old, but we've got a very easy upgrade path to swap those boxes out for the new range of products. And in doing that, they're all on the same platform for managing them then as well. David: I asked this because one of the complaints, among probably quite a few complaints with buying little Android boxes from Shenzhen or elsewhere is that if you order a hundred of them and then you order another hundred that second batch of one hundred might have different operating systems or different versions of the operating system, different electronics inside and everything else. So every time they show up, you're starting from scratch. Rowan Brunger: Absolutely. Welcome to buying consumer products. But we manage our chipsets and our components very strictly, and you can imagine the volumes we make them in because there's a lot of crossover from the set-top box side of the business but more importantly, we operate Android AOSP. So, we actually control and write the firmware for the product ourselves. So, in terms of updating the products, we're putting our own firmware on there. We're not relying on Google or Android updates for anything; in fact, much the opposite, because we want to be in control of it. So for instance, when you boot one of our boxes up, there's no app store. There's no standard Google browser on there, it's exactly what we choose to put on there, which makes it very fit for purpose because it's not running a million things in the background. We give it some very clear parameters and control exactly what middleware or APK that we put on there that's monitored centrally and all the versions and updates are controlled centrally as well. So you know exactly what's on there and you're the master of your own destiny.  David: Are you having to worry about security, well, I guess everybody worries about security, but because, as you just described, does that kind of greatly reduce the risks? Rowan Brunger: Yeah, it does, and again, this is something we've pulled over from our knowledge of the Pay TV market. So working with Android, we adhere to some pretty strict guidelines from Google in terms of security patches and timely updates, et cetera, and we actually think that's really very relevant in the pro AV market as well. So we've actually pulled over the standards that we adhere to on the Pay TV market, within the digital signage space. So as a result of that, we do at least four firmware updates a year that contain all the relevant security patches because there's nothing else on there in terms of an app store, et cetera, we're cleared in very highly secure environments. So we do a lot of work with the government. We've got a really interesting project going on, within a prison. So somebody's made their own middleware that they're using on the box and actually running entertainment within prison cells using the H200, which you can imagine is a super secure environment. So because we're in complete control of it, we can make it as secure as we like. And we're seeing that more and more prevalent with even retail rollouts now, with things like 802.1X authentication on networks, which I've never heard asked for but have been asked quite a lot for recently. So we quite got an agile development team. We're able to add functions like that and drop them in the latest firmware, and get them out of the boxes very quickly.  David: So because you're shipping a lot of units, do you get some sense of what the marketplace demand is?  For the longest time, people were saying, yes, it would be nice if we went to 4k, but nobody actually needs it yet, and for signage applications, it's probably never needed. Certainly, 8k, which is being marketed, is something that is probably years away if it ever comes. What is the marketplace actually using? Rowan Brunger: We are being asked for 4k a lot more. You're right in the signage space; it's less applicable, although a lot of the CMS providers don't even output in 4k, which, obviously, is a stumbling block. But for those that do, we're just testing a build for 4k content at the moment, and we've got out with some beta testers, and that's going very well. Obviously, 4k video is pretty much a must when people are looking at video, and that's very much our expertise, how we can stream that and what protocols we use to stream it and transport streams and encryption, is all around 4k and in particular, low latency is something that we specialize in quite a lot. So that takes us down certain vertical markets such as sporting and gaming where latency is an absolute deal breaker.  So we're seeing for our players and going back to your question about market trends, I'd say 50% of our opportunities are video-led, and the other 50% are signage-led, but with an element of video, a lot of them are with an element of video as well. So I think our expertise in video is really setting us apart here, and that, down the 4k route. POE has been requested more and more so that's why it's standard on our H200s. David: For retail more than anything I would imagine? Rowan Brunger: Actually, no, and I thought it would be, but what we're seeing is the requests for Wi-Fi is actually coming through retail more than anywhere else because when people are doing a retrofit of a store or they want to have quite an agile space within the store and be creative with where they're putting the screens, there's not normally a network point there. So we're actually finding some of our big retail rollouts are actually going down the Wi-Fi route, which I didn't expect, to be honest, but we've done a separate Wi-Fi unit for that marketplace because leading back to the security, a lot of our government and military deployments require us not to even have the ability to have Wi-Fi in the box altogether, which is why we didn't just add Wi-Fi to the existing H200. We've actually done it as two separate products. But yeah, interestingly, we've just launched our, or we're just in the process of launching our Wi-Fi unit, and the inquiries that are coming in are predominantly retail, and also the leisure industry as well as people want to put more screens and things in bars and pubs that typically have terrible infrastructure. Wi-Fi seems to be the easiest route to go with that as well.  David: You mentioned streaming, I'm a little curious about that because most of the set-top boxes that are on the market have onboard storage and digital signage most typically is forward and stored and played off of a hard drive locally.  Are your boxes doing that, or is it all streaming? Rowan Brunger: No, it's all streaming. We can digest the number of transport streams such as multicast, unicast, low latency dash, and low latency HLS because that's what our bread and butter are on the set-top box side of the world. So we're finding a lot of people for instance, within the betting industry where low latency is an absolute must, we're working with specific middleware vendors that provide the streams on an OTT basis, and we decode them locally on the box with various different levels of encryption and it's enabling people to reduce the amount of head end hardware that they've got. Even down to sort of office builds, government buildings where there's an element of wanting just some basic news channels alongside the signage, the ability to switch between the two. So typically, you'd have a big head end, consumer set-top box with aerial on the roof, bringing those streams down, we're able to bring them in completely OTT. So we remove the need for all of that hardware, and just, bring it on an OTT basis straight to the box, which is game-changing for somebody that's, maybe, got a larger state and they have to rent aerial space on the roof of all their stores, have a big server unit within there, consuming a lot of power, needing managing, and obviously bringing those streams down locally, we literally just pop the addresses into the box, into a JSON file and we pull them down through our player that's on board within the software stack. David: Are there worries at all about the quality of service and reliability of service for connectivity? Because God knows that used to be an issue, but maybe it's gone away.  Rowan Brunger: It's becoming less of an issue because with different encryptions and transport streams, they require a lot less bandwidth. It still needs assessing, obviously, when you're looking at a sign. But you can tweak the bitrate frames between the different encryption levels to get to a happy medium of a quality that you want alongside a bandwidth that you're willing to play with. So, it's becoming less of an issue. We can still obviously decode on-prem feeds as well when it's absolutely paramount that the feeds have got to be on-premises but the bandwidth is becoming less and less of an issue now.  David: You mentioned enterprise TV at the front end of our chat. How do you define that?  Rowan Brunger: So it's really whether it's TV-led, and what I mean by enterprise TV is, anything that's not residential, and not, hospitality so retail, office environments, sports stadium, things like that. That's where we'd class as enterprise TV. So it's the enterprise-grade of the box, but it's primarily streaming IPTV rather than just signage.  David: Do you sell direct or do you kind of go through a channel or, through software partners? Rowan Brunger: So we sell purely through a channel. We sell through distributors around the globe, trade only, through the channel directly to our system integrators, and onto the end users. So yeah, we're a channel-focused business, and that's something that we've recently sort of redesigned because that model is very different from what Amino is used to in the Pay TV market where they may deal directly with operators. We've decided that within this marketplace, a channel-only focus is the best way to go. It ensures our partner's protection on pricing and margin, et cetera, and also gives us scalability that we've got partners out there promoting the product for us. David: When you started Looking at the digital signage market, was it a little baffling when you realized how many software companies there are? Rowan Brunger: Yes, there does seem to be an ever ending amount of CMS partners to play with. We've worked with a couple that we've got a history with and onboarded those guys. We've now got an accreditation process. So when we do onboard a partner, we truly onboard them as a partnership rather than just saying, okay, we've tested that version of the APK, and that works fine. Let's call it accredited.  We actually onboard them and make a commitment that CMS will work ongoing with Amino and we go into a partnership with the CMS so we get beta releases of each other's software so we can truly test it in advance, which is why it takes a little bit of time to onboard, although we have quite an impressive list of CMS vendors on the list to go through accreditation, so it is definitely a nice route to market. We want to play with as many people as we can. At the same time, not overloading ourselves.  I think what's helping us there is the fact that a lot of CMSs seem to develop their APK before the platforms, so we do tend to be able to onboard people fairly quickly. And if there is any integration work that needs doing, it's fairly straightforward, and we've seen it before on somebody else's application. So yeah, onboarding and partnering are absolutely key for us over the next 12 months. We don't want what CMS somebody uses to be a barrier to sell, and it's not just a CMS, we work very closely with a number of streaming middleware companies as well that are specific in certain vertical markets as well.  David: So you're at a stand at some trade show and a CMS, digital signage CMS software company walks up and says, “Hi, I'm aware of you guys, and would like to be involved.” What's that thing you tell them when they say, “What do we need or how do we need to be set up in order for this to work?”  Rowan Brunger: Initially, we would ask for a version of their application and log in to their system, and we deliberately ask for no more than that because we want to test it as a virgin user if you like. So we put it through a first round of testing, which is: Does this go onto the box? Does it behave as if I would expect it to behave as a user? And that's our first round of testing. Normally, if that goes okay, we put it forward towards a full Q.A. test with our Hong Kong development team, which is a 400-point Q.A. test, which literally tests every element of the software and the integration, and at that point, we give a report back to the CMS provider to say, “Yes, it's all gone smoothly” or “It works, but can we suggest we do this and this integration together to make it a better experience?” And then, we go into the commercials of the partnership and make sure that we're sharing best practices with each other in terms of updates and things. We also have a lot of APIs that are available through our remote management software that we're finding a lot more of the CMS partners want to integrate into their CMS platform to give the end users, that one pane of glass, whether they're managing content or the device that they can do it in one place. So we have completely open APIs for the CMS partners to be able to do that and put a lot of the functionality that we have in our device management, actually in their front-end system that the customer is using every day for the content.  David: Does your platform support IP streaming or multicast or that sort of thing? Is there a foundational thing they have to have?  Rowan Brunger: No, not at all. We are dealing with some partners to put our video play technology within their CMS but it's not these guys' expertise. So, actually, the value to them of working with Amino is you can run their CMS software and switch seamlessly into an IPTV solution alongside their CMS. So, all of a sudden, they can speak to their customers about IPTV streaming solutions alongside pretty much any CMS rather than having to have a specialized solution incorporated into their roadmap.  How many times have we provided screens to somebody and you get the call, maybe two, two weeks later, two years later, “Can we put some TV streams through this for us?” For us, that's just a service we can turn on without having to ship any hardware. So it gives a lot of flexibility to these existing CMS deployments.  David: You mentioned the Hong Kong software team, is that where the company is based?  Rowan Brunger: No, we're based in Cambridge in the UK. So we are a UK-based company and have been for our existence. We have a couple of support teams. One is in Portugal, level one support is in Portugal, and we have a level two support team in Hong Kong. So we've got to follow the sun kind of coverage on support.  David: And manufacturing is done in China like everybody else? Rowan Brunger: Some manufacturing is done in China. There's a whole host of countries that we're manufacturing in. We've got stuff coming out of Thailand, Taiwan, Hong Kong. It depends on the product or the chipset, but yeah, a fairly well-diverse manufacturing plant. We're not stationed all in one place. David: What's the next AV trade show that you guys will have a stand at or a presence at?  Rowan Brunger: So Infocomm is coming up. We've got a presence there, and we've just done ISE, as you know, and then we've got some presence at NAB as well because we do see some crossover from some of the broadcasting shows that are looking at enterprise video or signage. So our trade show calendar is still split between Pay TV, but with a much larger emphasis than we have done on the AV world.  David: If people want to know more about Amino, where do they find you online? Rowan Brunger: Sure, just go to Amino.tv.  David: Clever! All right, Rowan, thank you very much for your time. Rowan Brunger: Thank you, David. Pleasure as always.

MS-DOS CLUB
MS-DOS CLUB – Vol 40 - Lands of Lore y Matrox G400.

MS-DOS CLUB

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023 188:32


MS-DOS CLUB – Vol 40- Lands of Lore y Matrox G400. Este podcast está patrocinado por ACTSL, puedes visitar su sitio en actsl.com. El listado del disquete VOL 40 es: Presentación: 00:02:42 Autoexec.bat: 00:09:19 Bases concursos: 00:10:20 Juegos - Lands of Lore: 00:20:35 Publicidad: 01:18:50 El Debate: 01:41:29 Ese loco Hardware: 01:54:42 Readme.txt: 02:41:52 Despedida: 02:57:35 En este programa vamos a tener un gran experto en juegos de rol para PC, David Skywalker, el cual nos va a asesorar en cual es la mejor forma de disfrutar de este clásico de Westwood Studios. Os proponemos dos pedazo de concursos, uno de Mods para Doom y otro en el que os pedimos audios hablando de esta pedazo de franquicia de ID Software, que va a cumplir la nada desdeñable edad de 30 años. Con unos premios exquisitos. Además vamos a tener las habituales secciones de La Publicidad en el cual recordaremos a Héctor de Uno para todas. Logaran quiere llevar el debate al mundo del retro en una sección que no sabe muy bien como llamar y que, de momento, dice que podría llamarse agilipollaDOS, no sabemos si nos acaba de convencer... Martin Gamero nos hará un repaso de la edición especial de PC que ha montado Retro Parla y nos hablará de las gráficas Matrox G400. Ayúdanos a mantener MS-DOS Club. Descargar el episodio Escuchar en: iTunes | iVoox | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Podimo | Feed Agradecemos en este episodio a: Sonia Chaves (@DubbingSonia) por su voz para las cortinillas. Canal de Sonia en Ivoox: Órbita Arrakis. Web de Sonia: soniachaves.es. Xabi San Martín (@laorejadevgogh): Por la sintonía "Tino's Theme" del programa. Dani Nevado (@DanySnowyman): Por el logo del programa. David Skywalker(@dskywalk): Por encontrar un ratito para honrarnos con su visita. Javier Sancho (@kalzakath1): Por su dedicación y participación y editar esto. Antonio Lozano (alias Logaran): Por ser el ayatolá de la emulación y un tío cojonudo. Martin Gamero (@3dfxlegacy) por traernos su sapiencia sobre hardware. Podéis ver los libros de Martin en su web: kentinelstudios.com A los productores de este podcast en Patreon: Alfonso, MrZapato_hdfg10, iXuacu, Jorge SCO y Marcelo García. Al resto de Patreons que nos echan una mano para que esto no nos cueste dinero y a la gente que nos escucháis y apoyáis recomendando el programa y comentando.

AVNation Specials
The Road To InfoComm 2023 With Matrox

AVNation Specials

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2023 3:47


In just one week, InfoComm 2023 will be taking place in Orlando from June 12-16. There you will find the latest innovations within the AV industry from many different verticals. We sit down with Matrox's EMEA Business Development Manager Rob Moodey to discuss their partnership with Intel for Arc graphics cards, and what they will have to showcase at Booth 2917 during the show.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Rants & rAVes
Rants & rAVes Episode 1233: Matrox Video Heads to InfoComm 2023 With New LUMA Series, IPMX-Based ConvertIP Series

Rants & rAVes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2023 8:09


PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #721 - RIP Microsoft, Solidigm Synergy, Intel's Terrible Quarter, Arc GPU News, AMD TPM exploit and MORE

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2023 67:34


It's our seven hundred and twenty-first podcast! And what a podcast it is. We even had a fake visit from Allyn, who didn't join us because I forgot to ask him to. And so many other topics like Ryzen burns, AMD TPM exploited, NVIDIA supply issues, and Intel loses billions and rebrands!Timestamps:00:00 Intro01:17 Burger of the Week02:58 RIP Microsoft ... branded keyboards and mice04:45 No more features updates for Windows 10, either06:59 More pointless pontification about Ryzen burnouts12:37 A fake cameo from Allyn Malventano!!13:34 Solidigm Synergy 2.0 released - a free performance boost19:26 Intel loses billions in worst quarter ever24:08 AMD also lost money27:27 Intel might re-brand Core CPUs because marketing fixes everything30:18 Arc update: employees hint at Battlemage and Celestial GPU process nodes31:40 More Arc! This time, Matrox has Intel inside34:15 NVIDIA supply rumors36:09 Some RTX 4070 vs RX 6950 XT chatter39:40 Podcast sponsor - Bloomberg Careers40:56 Security Corner45:56 Gaming Quick Hits52:31 G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB DDR5-7200 memory reviewed56:20 PNY EliteX-PRO60 SD card for 4K video (and what V30, V60, and V90 mean)1:00:25 Picks of the Week1:07:02 Outro1:07:31 Tire ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

TechLinked
Intel Core “Ultra”, AI ‘Godfather' quits Google, Microsoft Silicon + more!

TechLinked

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 7:50


0:00 look, it's a monday 0:07 Intel Core rebranding 1:28 'Godfather of AI' quits Google with warning 2:44 Microsoft Silicon ARM chips? 3:33 Grammarly 4:20 QUICK BITS 4:26 Google Pixel Fold leaks 4:57 Edge browser ad for Bing 5:40 EA blames Jedi bugs on W10 6:19 Matrox announces Intel GPUs 7:03 Steam Deck controls turret News Sources: https://lmg.gg/eSSNs

AV+ from Commercial Integrator
AV+ Podcast: Ron Berty on Differing Approaches to AV-over-IP Deployment

AV+ from Commercial Integrator

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 31:30


On this episode of the Commercial Integrator AV+ podcast, Dan Ferrisi, host and editor-in-chief, chats with Ron Berty, business development manager at Matrox, about some common misconceptions when it comes to video-over-IP transmission and AVoIP implementation. A one-size-fits-all approach does not apply when it comes to IP transmission of AV content, and Berty explains why.In addition to tackling the misconceptions around AVoIP transmission, the duo discusses the following:What an interframe codec is, and how it differs from a high compression codec (4:23)Latency and network topology (11:10)How to synchronize real-time data in the control room with the cloud (15:54)…and much, much more! This AV+ podcast is brought to you by ViewSonic. Visit vsfinch.es/Commercial-Integrator to learn more about the company's remarkable lineup of commercial displays, interactive flatpanels for K-12 school districts and much more. 

Manufacturing Hub
Ep. 84 - [Greg McEntyre] Industrial Machine Vision Systems & Their Integration in Manufacturing

Manufacturing Hub

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2022 81:01


Guest BioI am a knowledgeable source of factory automation techniques when using machine vision systems, robotics, sensors, and non-contact measurement devices on production lines. My work has used the most influential brands of intelligent cameras, such as Cognex, Keyence, Banner, Omron, Matrox, Dalsa, and more. Most recently, my experience with the Elementary ML platform has shown me what machine learning vision systems can offer, and I am on a path to learning much about the next wave of AI-backed vision systems. My experience reflects 22+ years of hands-on use of machine vision equipment placed directly into production environments.How are people typically using Vision Systems?How can we use them better?Join us as Greg McEntyre is giving us a deep dive into all things Vision Systems.Have questions about or comments on vision systems?Manufacturing Hub Episode 84. Recommended Materials Lord of the Rings Purple Cow Connect with Us Greg McEntyre Vlad Romanov Dave Griffith Manufacturing Hub Let Us Know What You ThinkIf you enjoyed the show, it would mean the world to us if you could leave us a review: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/manufacturing-hub/id1546805573#manufactuing #automation #digitaltransformation #machinevision

On Call with Insignia Ventures with Yinglan Tan and Paulo Joquino
S04 Call #21: Maturing Indonesia's Ecommerce Need for Speed and Why Digitalization Starts with Listening with Shipper Chief Customer Officer Craig Wheeler

On Call with Insignia Ventures with Yinglan Tan and Paulo Joquino

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2022 35:00


In this call, we're back with another leader from Indonesia's leading logistics-first ecommerce enabler Shipper. In past episodes, we've had the pleasure of going on call with CEO Phil Opamuratawongse, then COO Budi Handoko, and most recently CTO Marvin Arif and VP of Engineering Agus Daud. Now we're introducing a retail, supply chain, commerce veteran who has just joined Shipper in the past few months and has taken up the helm of Chief Customer Officer, Craig Wheeler. He shares on call what he's bringing to the table for Shipper, his own views on Shipper's growth trajectory and the rapidly evolving Indonesian ecommerce market, and his approach to leadership and customer service. Timestamps (01:04) Paulo introduces Craig Wheeler; (02:01) Bringing 20+ years of retail and commerce expertise into Shipper customer-centric business; (09:50) Maturing “Need for Speed” Ecommerce Market in Indonesia; (15:28) Commerce Digitalization from On the Ground Listening to Full Stack Tooling; (20:44) Beyond enabling better logistics to enabling better long-term business growth; (25:52) Navigating Leadership in Indonesia; (27:55) Rapid Fire Round; About our guest Craig Wheeler is the Chief Customer Officer at Shipper. Prior to Shipper, Craig was Group VP of Digital and OmniChannel at leading Indonesian omnichannel retailer Kanmo Group. Prior to coming to Indonesia, Craig had more than two decades career as an operations director in multiple global companies enabling retail, supply chain, distribution, and ecommerce, including Rakuten Europe, QVC, Matrox. His experience has made him an expert in delivering digital, organizational, and operational change within Omnichannel and Multinational organizations, and through that, he has driven change in many SME and startup organizations, with direct experience of growing startups in phase 1 or phase 2 of their growth regardless of backing. Music: Energetic and Upbeat Rock Background Music For Videos and Workouts The content of this podcast is for informational purposes only, should not be taken as legal, tax, or business advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security, and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any Insignia Ventures fund.

Rants & rAVes
Rants & rAVes — Episode 1148: Matrox Featured the Matrox QuadHead2Go Digital Signage Content Mapping Controller at IC22

Rants & rAVes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2022 6:31


Among the many products Matrox was showing at InfoComm 2022, one that received a lot of attention was a creative digital signage controller known as the QuadHead2Go. The QuadHead2Go is a 1-input (HDMI or DisplayPort) to 4-output (HDMI) controller that allows you to re-map the input content to any configuration of 4 displays similar to a mini-monitor wall […]

Ross  Video XPression U
Quick Tips 105 - Setting up XPression Studio I/O Hardware

Ross Video XPression U

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 3:25


For the users who are tasked with setting up hardware, this video shows how to configure the output hardware on the XPression Studio systems using the Matrox x.mio2 I/O cards. Follow along to get a dual-channel XPression Studio output hardware configured. Living Live! with Ross Video www.rossvideo.com/XPression-U

Zebra's Your Edge Podcast
Industrial Automation Insider: Why Zebra Acquired Matrox Imaging and You Should be Excited if You're Being Driven to Automate Operations

Zebra's Your Edge Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022 19:25


Donato Montanari discusses Zebra's plans to both simplify and scale machine vision applications specific to robot guidance, 3D inspections, and other business-critical capabilities in today's complex supply chains. Listen now then check out more about Zebra's vision for machine vision and fixed industrial scanning solutions on the Your Edge blog.   

Rants & rAVes
Rants & rAVes — Episode 1130: Matrox Will Focus on AV-over-IP at InfoComm 2022; Including Both HDBaseT and IPMX

Rants & rAVes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 10:14


Gary was joined on this pre-InfoComm 2022 videocast with Matrox‘s Vice President of Sales – AV/IT Group; Americas & Asia Pacific, Samuel Recine. Matrox has its own booth (N1563) at the show but will also be demonstrating new encoding and decoding products in the IPMX/AIMS Alliance booth as well as the HDBaseT booth. It's all […]

Rants & rAVes
Rants & rAVes — Episode 1100: Matrox Will Use ISE 2022 to Show Its ConvertIP AV-over-IP Ecosystem

Rants & rAVes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 10:38


Matrox took the lead in embracing the SMPTE 2110 standard (what's currently used in broadcast video) for ProAV AV-over-IP and helped form the AIMS Alliance. AIMS, in turn, created the IPMX proposed standard for sending AV-over-IP that hopes to be ratified in late 2022, becoming the first and only AV-over-IP standard for ProAV installs. However, Matrox's ConvertIP does more than that — it […]

The Robot Report Podcast
Mark Messina on the future of warehouse automation

The Robot Report Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2022 55:56


Steve and Mike discuss the latest robot news from the last week, including the acquisition of Matrox by Zebra Techolologies, a new Realsense camera from Intel, the new Techmetics TRV AMR, the new Robotnik Robout heavy payload AMR and the deployment of BreezyOne Robot at Houston Airports. Our guest on the show today is Mark Messina, who as recently hired as CEO, Americas for warehouse solutions provider Addverb Technologies. Addverb is one of the largest warehouse solutions providers in Asia and are beginning its expansion into the Americas under the leadership of Mr Messina.

Rants & rAVes
Rants & rAVes — Episode 1198: Matrox Will be at ISE 2023 With a Family of IPMX-based AV-over-IP Products

Rants & rAVes

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2022 11:26


La Hora Retrona
La Hora Retrona 7x02: El legado de las olvidadas con Martin Gamero

La Hora Retrona

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2021 115:51


En este nuevo episodio volvemos a invitar a Martin a hablarnos de su libro, nunca mejor dicho, "El legado de las olvidadas", que actualmente se encuentra en campaña en kickstarter. En él se hablará de las siguientes compañias: Bitboys, S3, Matrox, Videologic y Number Nine. Todo ello con el rigor que caracteriza los libros de Martin. Más información en: Kentinel Studios: https://kentinelstudios.com Página del kickstarter: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mgp1982/the-legacy-of-the-forgotten-el-legado-de-las-olvidadas/description

Alpha Dog Mindset
JUGGLING THE AMERICAN DREAM | DEATH TO SELF| UNPLUG FROM THE MATRIX

Alpha Dog Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 10:58


The implicit message is to follow the course of society, because society knows best. Men and in general the population the population is marginalized. Our identities are pushed to the boundaries in favor of someone else's agenda, we become pawns in the consumerism culture. Power and freedom come when we remove ourselves from the Matrox and start claiming our identity and discovering who we are and can be.

Torréfaction
Torréfaction #195 : Nuclear Blaze, Dopesick, happy birthday Matrox, Nvidia GeForce Now RTX 3080, Google Pixel 6 et 6 Pro, MacBook Pro 14 et 16 pouces

Torréfaction

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2021 47:52


Cette semaine : Nuclear Blaze, ventes Playstation 5, Dopesick, Quivver - Revelate, 45 ans de Matrox, NVIDIA GeForce Now RTX 3080, Google Tensor SoC, Google Pixel 6 et 6 Pro, AirPods 3, et nouveaux MacBook Pro 14 et 16 pouces. Lisez plutôt Torréfaction #195 : Nuclear Blaze, Dopesick, happy birthday Matrox, Nvidia GeForce Now RTX 3080, Google Pixel 6 et 6 Pro, MacBook Pro 14 et 16 pouces avec sa vraie mise en page sur Geekzone. Pensez à vos rétines.

Making the Media
S1E19: Stream On

Making the Media

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 27:15


S1E19: STREAM ON With more than 500 members, why has the SRT Alliance boomed and why are so many companies from across the broadcast and streaming space getting involved? In this episode, we delve into the background of SRT (Secure Reliable Transport) technology and ask those behind it: Why did they make it open source? What workflow challenges does it solve for news, sports, and other genres? And, crucially, what is coming next? Our Guest This Episode Peter Maag is Chief Marketing Officer and Executive Vice President for Strategic Partnerships at Haivision, the company that invented SRT. He brings over 26 years of proven experience in international business development, sales, marketing, and strategic partner development. Previously, Peter served as Vice President at Hyperchip, Discreet Logic/Autodesk, and Matrox, developing top-level strategic alliances and channel/OEM partnerships. Peter received his MBA from McGill University and his Bachelor of Engineering Science (Mechanical Engineering) degree from the University of Western Ontario in Canada. More Resources For more on this topic, check out: · Media Composer 2021.9 · MediaCentral | Stream Contact Us Questions? Comments? Cool ideas? Get in touch: makingthemedia@avid.com or @craigaw1969. Follow Avid at @avid. Credits Host: Craig Wilson Producer: Matt Diggs Social: Wim Van den Broeck Theme Music: Greg “Stryke” Chin

This Is Brendone
77: Bianca Carelli - Popping out of bushes to make friends

This Is Brendone

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2021 88:10


Bianca Carelli - Wrestler, Pageant Queen, Scholar (Recorded 02/16/21) "Love of the environment" Second Generation, Ethnic Background, Toughness, Runescape, YTV The Zone, Conspiracies, Pageants, Mantras, Endorsements & Surgeries Bianca on Instagram & Twitter Recommended viewing: Amy Crimson & Matrox vs Bianca Carelli & Yonge Love - Badass injury INTRO SONG: Earthquake - Labrinth ft. Tinie Tempah END SONG: Fly - Nicki Minaj ft. Rihanna Sincerely Thank you, stay sane, healthy, safe & I truly appreciate you all. . : !LISTEN - SHARE- ENJOY! : . PATREON!!!!! patreon.com/BrendoneC GO HARD PRO HOLIDAY Special - youtube.com/watch?v=-XVYExOaz90 twitter & Instagram 1-866-585-0445 - http://ca.portal.gs/ - 24/7 Canadian Mental Health Toll Free Number!!!!! www.facebook.com/BrendoneCaulfield https://www.facebook.com/HoldenAlbright twitter.com/HoldenPro https://www.instagram.com/HoldenPro/ www.youtube.com/user/Spadez2316 Patrons: Tommy Richardson, James RingsideWithChops, Brendan Adair, Jason Mitchell, Rob Arbic, Uncle Bobby B, Jordan McIlwain, Curtis Rich, Joe Monroe, Caleb Johnstone, Guilmy Talks, Morgan Thomas, Rex Atkins, Ryan Knight, Lewis Carlan, Clayton Wilson, Justin Zane, Eric Cairnie, DanielSan, Shane Petrovic

Kitcast: Digital Signage News
Kitcast Podcast feat Matrox - Episode 8 - What about Videowalls?

Kitcast: Digital Signage News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2019 18:20


We continue our series of interviews recorded at the Digital Signage Summit Europe in Munich. The new episode of focuses on the video walls market and our guest is Katrin Kerber, Account Manager Graphics at Matrox.

munich matrox
Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 124: Firewire smack smack smack

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2018 55:32


Ur veckans rafflande avsnitt: Vassa saker är farliga - en sedelärande historia The Expanse läggs ner - Netflix ombeds rädda den Facebook datacentrerar sig i Sverige Turbokort till Amiga 2000 - nu kör vi igen! Grafikkort till Amigor När byttes ändra-ljud-ljudet i macOS? Tre versioner bakåt 3G avvecklas! Våra bästa 3G-minnen Vi diskuterar iPhone-lanseringsfilmen från 2007 och 3G från 2008. Jobs visar hur man synkar musik till iPhone via iTunes och frågan måste givetvis bli: vem synkar musik till sin telefon idag? Fredrik åker till Hamburg, dricker snygga drinkar och beskådar seriösa modellbyggen Och det kommer mer Jeff Minter i VR! Länkar The expanse Namninsamling som vill att Netflix köper The expanse Facebook bygger ut i Luleå Boston consulting group GVP 030 combo Picasso II AGA - advanced graphics architecture Amigaos Morphos Matrox parhelia 3G Nokia N95 Motorola rokr Iphone-lanseringen Iphone 3G-lanseringen När Steve Jobs skällde ut publiken för att de använde nätet Cover flow Bandle bobble Ipod tredje generationen Firewire Ipod-reklamfilmen från 2001 Take California med Propellerheads Google IO-keynoten 2018 Google Duplex bokar klipptid Miniatur wunderland Fleischmann H0-skala - 1:87 Oculus spelar in VR-teater The invisilbe hours Goatup Gridrunner Laurel eller Yanny? Gästspel på slutet: vår vän Iller Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-124-firewire-smack-smack-smack.html.

Tech Talk from the Markertek News Channel
Matrox MX02 Mini HD/SD I/O Device & Converter

Tech Talk from the Markertek News Channel

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2010


This slick little box gives you HDMI and Analog Component Video I/O for Mac or PC via a single PCIe connection and delivers Matrox Max faster than realtime H.264 encoding. You can take it with you wherever you go. Use it with a desktop system and your favorite applications including Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere Pro and Photoshop, and many more. Capture and playback high definition video via HDMI and analog component; or NTSC and PAL via analog component, S-Video, and composite. Convert your standard definition videos to high definition, or vice versa, while capturing or playing out, using Matrox MXO2 Mini's high-quality dedicated hardware. Matrox MAX is a unique technology that implements faster than realtime H.264 encoding for resolutions ranging from iPod to HD. It uses a dedicated hardware processor to accelerate the creation of H.264 files for Blu-ray, the web, and mobile devices. By using specialized hardware acceleration, jobs are finished with amazing speed and system resources are liberated for other tasks. Quality and flexibility are ensured through direct integration with professional applications such as Apple Compressor on the Mac and Adobe Media Encoder on the PC. As an added benefit, the Matrox MAX technology allows direct export to higher-quality H.264 Blu-ray compliant files from Compressor. Turn your HDMI screen into an inexpensive professional-grade video monitor with 10-bit 4:2:2 color precision via Matrox's unique color calibration tool. Controls for hue, chroma, contrast, brightness, and blue-only are provided. You get accurate color representation so that you can use your HDMI monitor even for color grading. Matrox MXO2 Mini provides 1:1 pixel mapping on HDMI displays that support this feature so your video will not be stretched and distorted by the monitor. You get accurate monitoring on your HDMI display in the following resolutions: 720 x 486 (NTSC) 720 x 576 (PAL) 1920 x 1080 1280 x 720 Features Works with Mac and PC, laptops and desktops Small, lightweight, external box that's easily connected to your cameras and monitors Capture and playback high definition video via HDMI and analog component; or NTSC and PAL via analog component, S-Video, and composite Turns your HDMI screen into a professional-grade video monitor with color calibration tools including blue-only High-quality 10-bit hardware scaling engine for realtime upscaling, downscaling, and cross conversion on capture and playback (See Specifications section for scaling features supported on Mac and PC) Stereo RCA and up to 8 channels of HDMI audio input and output 5.1 and 7.1 surround sound monitoring on the HDMI output Easily edit AVCHD footage by capturing into an edit-friendly compressed or uncompressed format Works with your favorite applications including Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe Photoshop, and many more Three-year hardware warranty and complimentary telephone support Item Includes Matrox MXO2 Mini input/output device Matrox MXO2 PCIe cable (1 meter) Matrox MXO2 Mini external power supply Two S-Video adapters Matrox MXO2 PCIe host ExpressCard/34 adapter (for use with MacBook Pro and PC laptops

FSBreak - The Flight Simulator Podcast
FSBreak 45: Scott and Cody from A2A Simulations, And More!

FSBreak - The Flight Simulator Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2009


Hosted by Eric McClintock, Danton Berube, Mark Stewart, Brendan Farmer, and Special Guests Scott Gentile and Cody Bergland. Listen Here: Download Here A2A Simulations Join us as we talk to Scott and Cody with A2A Simulations about their history and future, and their Piper J3 Cub with AccuSim, and past and future products from them. Recommendations Eric: Plan-G - Free IFR and VFR Flight Planner for FS9 or FSX http://www.tasoftware.co.uk   Google Maps interface for rich topographical and satellite detail Shows airspace, airports and navaids on the map (from Flight Sim data) Configurable levels of detail (objects displayed) for each zoom setting Fully editable plans can be saved in FSX or FS9 format Existing FS plans can be loaded Reverse flight plan Print map and PLOG Customisable database of user waypoints, VRPs, airstrips etc (UK CAA VRPs, plus some OZx airstrips already defined) Connects to FSX via SimConnect Aircraft telemetry, breadcrumb trail, traffic, weather etc available when connected to FSX Saved flight trails can be displayed for later analysis Range Rings can be configured to show distance or flight time Mark: FourFlights Four flights is a web site that publishes 4 flights a day to find 4 different degrees of weather happening in real world locations. Danton: Ground Environment X Europe Ground Environment X Europe represents our new approach in texture design, incorporating high level detail graphics in the default Flight Simulator X 1-meter texture resolution format. This delivers a hi-fidelity image without using excessive disk space or processor power. Our design allows a simulation pilot to enjoy clearly defined visuals from nearly ground level up to higher altitudes. Brendan: ZurichX airport scenery for FSX and FS9 Zürich Airport is a scenery developed for Microsoft Flight Simulator X (FSX) and Flight Simulator 2004 ( FS9 ). It's has been created with great attention to visual quality and performance, using the latest available programming techniques, both in FSX and FS9. The product is sold as 2 Products in One. This means, by buying one version, you will automatically get the other for free, since activation and serial codes are shared between FSX and FS9. Voicemail X-Plane and 8 Cores from Ben E-Mails E-Mail from Gerry My name is Gerry First I want to congratulate you and your team. FSBreak has grown to be a fantastic podcast of the highest quaity. You should be very proud. I have listened to every broadcast and look forward each week to the next one. I've been a flight sim fan since the very beginning and spend a lot of my flying time on Vatsim. It's hard to believe when I look back and think how excited I got flying in a wireframe environment. FS has on gotten better and better since then and I look forward to what the next generation will bring. This is for Danton, but Eric should also go this route. As one who uses Matrox Triple Head-2-Go, I could never see myself going back to a single monitor. I don't care how large the monitor is, you still only have a narrow field of view. The additioal monitors give you an expanded view that you will not believe. And yes, you can still use your track IR. Go to Matrox web site and look at the examples they provide. Since you are building a fantastic system, you should take another look at this type of setup. You won't be sorry. Keep up the great work. Many thanks again, Gerry New Bush Pilot VA I was wondering if you guys could give my new VA a plug, I have Bill Womack as a pilot, and John from FTX, has given us his endorsement! I know you probably don't do this type of thing, but what we have is something unique! We are the Only VA designed for A2A's J3 Piper Cub! With Hubs and FBOs located in TongassX, FTX Australia, PNG, Plum Island and the Pacific Northwest! Our Forums are only open to pilots, but I have a few things to look at! Stop by! And give Us a Look & Shout! http://www.backcountryservicesva.com Thank you for your time and consideration! Blue Skies! Xflyboy Ed Cleveland    

Geek Syndicate
Geek Syndicate - Episode 121

Geek Syndicate

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2009 55:51


Welcome to another Fifty Five minutes of geek action!In our shout out section we''re joined briefly by a special guest. Barry tries his hand at Opera singing and Dave's does possibly the worst impression you've ever heard.News: Buffy the movie with no weedon or Gellar. The end of Lying in the Gutters and the Doctor Who movie script news.Week that was: Matrox, Channel Evil, Green Latern fan trailer, Dexter's Half Dozen, 24 Season finale, Legend of the Seeker and a non spoiler review of Terminator Salvation.Main: We report back from the MCM London Expo.Enjoy!

Tech Talk from the Markertek News Channel
MXO2 Portable HD Interface for Mac from Matrox

Tech Talk from the Markertek News Channel

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2009


Markertek News Channel coverage of the new Matrox MXo2 Portable HD Mac interface at GV Expo 2008, Washington, D.C. The new Matrox MXO2 is the first truly portable device that gives you broadcast-quality input/output, monitoring, and up/down/cross conversion to streamline your workflow with Apple Final Cut Studio 2 and Adobe CS3 Production Premium on the Mac. It's lightweight, fits in your laptop bag, and runs for hours on a field battery. It lets you work seamlessly in any format you want. Enjoy new-found freedom with Matrox MXO2 - edit anywhere

Le podcast vidéo Ça s'branche où?
Épisode 47 : Lecteur d'empreintes digitales; Une tondeuse électrique sans fil

Le podcast vidéo Ça s'branche où?

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2008 9:15


À Ça s'branche où? aujourd'hui : un adaptateur vidéo, une serrure high-tech, un clavier pour manette XBox, une tondeuse sans fil et des chargeurs pour piles. Top branché, 1re partie Certains se souviennent peut-être des fameuses salles de cinéma des années 70 qui, un peu comme Imax, projetaient une image sur une surface de presque 180 degrés. Pour le spectateur, ça donnait franchement l'impression d'être au coeur de l'action! Un petit gadget pour ordinateur qui permet de reproduire une immersion visuelle à peu près similaire. Il s'agit de l'adaptateur vidéo TripleHead2Go, de la société montréalaise Matrox. Grâce à ce gadget, on peut brancher trois moniteurs sur un seul PC. Top branché, 2e partie Si vous utilisez un bloc-notes, il possède généralement une sortie vidéo auxiliaire qui vous donne droit à un second affichage sans ajouter d'appareils. Sinon, Matrox détaille aussi le DualHead2Go, qui permet de doubler sa surface d'affichage avec deux moniteurs. Moins épatant que le TripleHead2Go, mais probablement plus orienté sur le travail de bureau (ex. prod. graphique) que sur un usage multimédia (jeux, etc.). Également, on peut tout simplement installer une deuxième carte graphique dans son PC. Il en existe qui peuvent fonctionner d'office avec 2 moniteurs, comme la carte Radeon Pro d'ATI. Enfin, un moniteur comme le Cinema Display d'Apple, qui fait 30 pouces, peut offrir assez de surface d'affichage pour compenser l'absence d'un second moniteur! C'est beau mais c'est quoi? Ce clavier aurait donné le vertige même aux plus grands virtuoses. Tout à coup, votre Boîte X vous lie aux autres. Vous pouvez donc parler avec vos adversaires... ou les insulter. C'est aussi un bon moyen de ne pas devenir asocial tout en jouant à des jeux 24 heures sur 24. Et pourtant, ce n'est pas plus gros qu'une télécommande! C'est beau, mais c'est quoi? C'est l'ensemble Messenger pour Xbox 360. Attrape techno Quand on voyage, il est prudent de traîner une pile de rechange pour ses appareils électroniques. Une pile pour sans fil, une pour le portable, des piles AA pour le baladeur et pour l'appareil photo. Après tout, il n'y a pas toujours de prises de courant accessibles quand on voyage. Vous essaierez de brancher votre portable en Tchécoslovaquie, ce n'est pas évident... Un chargeur universel serait peut-être une très bonne idée d'achat? Surtout si, comme le chargeur Solio, il se charge à partir des rayons solaires! Comme ça, on ne court pas le risque de se faire prendre en pleine panne de courant...