But the point is that your graphics card is REALLY crappy if it doesn't allow you to adjust the image - that means it's USELESS for doing anything other than showing stuff where you don't mind losing a fair amount of the picture.
First, most people would not consider nvidia cards "crappy" just because they only allow for two modes -- overscan and underscan. Second, the card does what it's designed to do just fine -- display output designed for TV on a TV monitor. When you use the card in this manner, you're not losing ANY picture that you are supposed to be able to see -- the only part of the image you lose is the part that you're "supposed" to lose.
You're going to have the same problem with a whole load of things, not just Media Center.
I use the card's TV output for things like video editing. For these type of applicaitons, adjusting the card to eliminate overscan would be an INCORRECT way to set it up. If I adjusted the card so that the current Theater View fully fit on the TV screen, then the image would be improperly calibrated for viewing NTSC images.
And it's not *that* difficult to adjust the card - most cards. Powerstrip, and it's not the only utility, does support a HELL of a lot of different cards.
Again, this is not about whether or not it's possible to eliminate overscan -- it's about the fact that you shouldn't HAVE to. If Theater View mode is designed for display on a TV monitor, why shouldn't it follow the industry standard rules for displaying images on a TV monitor? Why not design it to follow the same rules that ALL other devices designed for outputting to a TV monitor follow?
That said, if you really do want to lose a lot of the display output,
I don't want to "lose a lot of display output." I want to have the Theater View, which was presumably designed to be viewed in a home theater type situation, work like EVERY other component designed for home theater -- i.e. every DVD player, videotape player, satellite receiver, cable box, laserdisc player, etc. out there. Would you claim that all these other devices "lose a lot of their display?" They all work exactly how I say Theater View should work.
then it's presumably not that big a deal to tweak the theatreview layout to accommodate it
I am doing just that -- so far so good.
but it'll be annoying for everyone else to then have that extra space round the outside wasted as a result!
I think you'll find that the opposite is the case -- i.e. that most people would prefer to have the image display properly with the standard overscan settings. This means that for most people, it will work by default without having to adjust the graphics card settings (which the average joe might not even know how to do.) What I'm suggesting is also the only way for the higher end crowd to properly set up a their PCs as HTPCs (Home Theater PCs.) A properly set up HTPC requires a standard amount of overscan to be used. If a HTPC is technically set up "correctly," the current MC Theater View will have the information on the edges of the screen cut off. If, on the other hand, you tweak the graphics card settings to eliminate overscan, then you will no longer have properly calibrated output from your HTPC.
That aside, is having the buttoms and information set it a little from the edges of the screen really that big of a deal for the people that insist on eliminating overscan? In other words, which is worse; having some people "waste" a little space around the edges of the screen, or having some people lose portions of the buttons and information? It seems to me that the best solution would be to do it "right" (i.e follow industry standards for displaying images on a TV monitor) and have all the information visible to everybody all the time.
By the way, is NTSC a lot worse in this respect than PAL? It certainly sounds like it...
I don't know -- perhaps NTSC uses more overscan.
Larry