I'm planning on setting up 4 x 65" LCD display panels, being lined up together in "Portrait" orientation.
As I'm planning to use this display for mostly 16:9 aspect ratio videos & commercials, I realise that the total pixel count will be 4320(H) x 1920(V) which will be slightly narrower that the native 16:9 pixel count, which should be 4320(H) x 2430(V).
Thus, does anyone have any idea if the included Nividia software does realtime video image cropping. As I do not want to end up with a compress "fat" video image.
Otherwise, are there any economical recommendations to solve this issue apart from getting an expensive videowall processor.
I'm planning on setting up 4 x 65" LCD display panels, being lined up together in "Portrait" orientation.
As I'm planning to use this display for mostly 16:9 aspect ratio videos & commercials, I realise that the total pixel count will be 4320(H) x 1920(V) which will be slightly narrower that the native 16:9 pixel count, which should be 4320(H) x 2430(V).
Thus, does anyone have any idea if the included Nividia software does realtime video image cropping. As I do not want to end up with a compress "fat" video image.
Otherwise, are there any economical recommendations to solve this issue apart from getting an expensive videowall processor.
I'm planning on setting up 4 x 65" LCD display panels, being lined up together in "Portrait" orientation.
As I'm planning to use this display for mostly 16:9 aspect ratio videos & commercials, I realise that the total pixel count will be 4320(H) x 1920(V) which will be slightly narrower that the native 16:9 pixel count, which should be 4320(H) x 2430(V).
Thus, does anyone have any idea if the included Nividia software does realtime video image cropping. As I do not want to end up with a compress "fat" video image.
Otherwise, are there any economical recommendations to solve this issue apart from getting an expensive videowall processor.
Look forward to your comments!
John
I'm planning on setting up 4 x 65" LCD display panels, being lined up together in "Portrait" orientation.
As I'm planning to use this display for mostly 16:9 aspect ratio videos & commercials, I realise that the total pixel count will be 4320(H) x 1920(V) which will be slightly narrower that the native 16:9 pixel count, which should be 4320(H) x 2430(V).
Thus, does anyone have any idea if the included Nividia software does realtime video image cropping. As I do not want to end up with a compress "fat" video image.
Otherwise, are there any economical recommendations to solve this issue apart from getting an expensive videowall processor.
Look forward to your comments!
John