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Showing posts from September, 2013

Watch 3D Movies in your computer using VLC Media Player/KM Player

Now a days many movies are releasing in 3D formats. This simple procedure guide you to enjoy 3D Half SBS (Side-by-Side) movies in your computer using VLC Media Player. 1-Open VLC Media Player 2-Click Tools 3-Select Effects and Filters 4-Choose Video Effects 5-Then VOUT/Overlay 6-Now u can see a box for 'Wall' 7-Click on that box and arrange rows-3 and columns-2 8-Now vlc will appear in a multiple window 9-Choose any one of that window and watch it in full screen and get the 3D effect. -OR- Just Download KMPlayer and Click on 3D button to turn 2D movies into Red/Cyan enabled 3D movies. Note: Half Side-by-Side (SBS) , means the left and right views of a 3D video are subsampled at half resolution and you get a backwards compatible full frame. Example: Say, each view is 1920x1080 subsample to 960 x 1080, put them side by side and now you have a 3D 1920x1080 frame. Full SBS , means you transmit both views at full resolution; better quality, but bigger file.

Understanding OEM products

O EM generally means "original equipment manufacturer." Sometimes it is referred to as "bulk packed", "white box", "brown box" and "gray market". Almost all PC component and software vendors make two versions of the same product based on a difference in the distribution channels. Retail ("distribution") is the main consumer channel, whilst OEM (to various systems manufacturers) is another. The retail channel typically uses colourful retail boxed products, with installation manuals, software CDs etc. Of course the cost of making the nice-looking packages is passed on to you, the customer. Retail packages are also more voluminous, and therefore cost more to ship. The OEM channel distributes products mainly to system builders and integrators, for example Dell, HP and Sun (the OEMs) and many small ones such as the mom-and-pop shop on the corner and embedded systems designers. These bulk-pack products do not have fancy packagi

Get maximum speed for USB data transfer

Partition should be NTFS and allocation unit size should be maximum at 64kilobytes then you will get max read and write speed. To do this just right click on the drive in windows (XP or higher) click on format option,then select 64KB as the allocation unit size. Will be getting write speed about 30 MBPS in USB 2.0. Check if write caching was enabled? my computer> right click on drive > properties go to "hardware" tab find your external in the list (it may be "generic usb hard drive) and click properties click "change settings" to un-hide the "policies" tab on the policies tab, make sure "better performance" is selected. For USB 2.0 Max speed is 480Mb/sec = 60MB/sec.