2015-10-08, 03:16
You should be calibrating your display. Not your output devices
(2015-10-07, 14:58)ScottAllyn01 Wrote:Thanks for the tip(2015-10-07, 13:46)frenshprince Wrote: Good to know, thank you
So two more
1) Can we change/add Kodi shortcuts Keyboard ?
2) I only have a Harmony remote IR, and as you know, some buttons don't work.
And especialy one very important : Contextual menu (X on pad, C on keyboard).
Is there something I can do about that ?
Thanks
Assuming that the IR signals are being received by the Shield, you should be able to use the Keymap Editor plugin in Kodi to map those buttons to whatever function(s) you want. If that doesn't work, you can snag one of these:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00224ZDFY
That remote works flawlessly in both the Shield UI and Kodi. Use your Harmony to learn all of the buttons from that Remote, then use Keymap Editor (and/or tweak the userdata/keymap .xml files) to configure the buttons to do whatever you like; this is the route that I went with my URC remote. The little IR receiver that comes with the remote I linked above is very responsive. I don't have any Harmony remotes anymore to test this with (former 880, One, and 900 user), but there's no reason for it not to work.
(2015-10-08, 12:15)wolfbiker Wrote:(2015-10-08, 03:16)drhill Wrote: You should be calibrating your display. Not your output devices
I like to crank my sharpness beyond the (insignificant) amount that my display allows.
(2015-10-07, 13:46)frenshprince Wrote: Good to know, thank youThe obvious thing to do would be to reprogram the Harmony with the Harmony Software, as a MCE remote control and make sure every button is assigned to some sort of function. Even if some of the functions do not make sense. Each button assignment should be different from the rest.
So two more
1) Can we change/add Kodi shortcuts Keyboard ?
2) I only have a Harmony remote IR, and as you know, some buttons don't work.
And especialy one very important : Contextual menu (X on pad, C on keyboard).
Is there something I can do about that ?
Thanks
(2015-10-08, 13:00)drhill Wrote:(2015-10-08, 12:15)wolfbiker Wrote:(2015-10-08, 03:16)drhill Wrote: You should be calibrating your display. Not your output devices
I like to crank my sharpness beyond the (insignificant) amount that my display allows.
In most cases the proper setting for a TV's sharpness is 0. Anything else introduces artifacts that aren't inherent to the source material. Sharpness is an antiquated setting from analog tv days. By upping that setting you are making it "worse". Obviously if you think its better have a ball, but it seems like a false reason to avoid the Shield.
(2015-10-09, 03:10)wolfbiker Wrote: Hmm, I'd say looks ARE subjective. How sharp I like mine probably looks like shit to your eyes, but it does not to mine. Whether or not is faithful to the source doesn't matter to me. Agree to disagree!
(2015-10-09, 09:58)querty1000 Wrote: Two questions, using the latest Jarvis nightly:No and no, but it could possible have in the future if you post your requests to Nvidia here: https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic...uest-2-0-/
- Is there any way with the nVidia Remote or a CEC Remote to see the CodecInfo overlay on video?
- what about full frame 3D (MVC) like the RPi does?