That is one of the most interesting ideas I've ever seen! Does anyone remember trying it with Windows 3.1, Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows XP desktop PCs? I wish I could have tried the same with the black Sony VCR my family had (the one similar to the model in this video).
Hello the Nostalgia Mall I have been observing your video database and I have been interested in two videos one is about the dell gx and the other about the dell 8200 I have a dell gxa tower and it has a case with isa and pci but for to be able to enable it I need the insertion diskette I was wondering if you have it and the dell 8200 to not be too long I would ask you if you have got the ram, greetings
I was going to watch RU-vid via my new CRT TV. I bought a VGA to composite/svideo combo adapter but it didn't work. So i'm still burning videos with the 4:3 aspect ratio to DVD-Rs i have.
Try recording DVD to VHS. See it flicker and go all crazy, would love to have this as a filter in different video editors, including Windows Movie Maker and Live Movie Maker.
That's macrovision. Use either a vhs recodrer with manual vsync tracking like the really older ones) or an inline, third-party video signal filter for removing the extra noise from each frame's sync header ... such as this video's kludge win11 solution .. 😉 Really, the strategy in the video can be done with nearly any OS, like as on a raspberry pi. Whatever the platform, the idea is to sanitize the recorded signal soas not to have those embedded macrovision* elements added to each scan frame in the raw video signal feeding in to the vhs recorder having been built with the macrovision "feature" ..