Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
The Other Kevin
- 15 Sep 2013 11:41
- 10314 of 11003
IE 10 is the one I hate. It takes ages to login here with it.
skinny
- 16 Sep 2013 09:50
- 10315 of 11003
Mega Bucks
- 16 Sep 2013 11:54
- 10316 of 11003
I will take a look on Ebay later and see if i can find a copy of Win 7 for a decent price,of course it must be a legal copy with the key :)one can find some really good reliable bargains that dont require the combination lock on my wallet to be used.
HARRYCAT
- 16 Sep 2013 16:39
- 10317 of 11003
I have a Panasonic 32" TV with a SD card recording option. When I record a program, I can only play it back at about 40% of the screen size, even if I record on 'Normal', 'Fine' etc. I have tried playing with the TV screen size option, but it makes no difference. Is this unique to SD cards or is there an option to change the viewing size?
Haystack
- 16 Sep 2013 16:41
- 10318 of 11003
I have a 50" Panasonic Viera that works fine that way. Have you tried to do the same using the USB port to a memory stick available.
HARRYCAT
- 16 Sep 2013 16:52
- 10319 of 11003
Not tried USB, but presumably that would entail copying it across from the SD card. I am keen to try to sort the SD option first.
Haystack
- 16 Sep 2013 16:54
- 10320 of 11003
I meant record the programme onto a USB stick that might reduce the problem to record or playback.
HARRYCAT
- 16 Sep 2013 17:04
- 10321 of 11003
Ah, no I haven't tried that. On my list of things to investigate!
HARRYCAT
- 16 Sep 2013 17:48
- 10322 of 11003
Just realised that I may have some catching up to do! I am actually playing & recording content on a micro SD card and using a SD card adaptor. I assume this does not produce the same results as using a full sized SD card? The micro SD is 2GB capacity, but maybe the format doesn't support full sized recording?
Haystack
- 16 Sep 2013 19:21
- 10323 of 11003
I doubt that there is anything on the SDcard that could influence what is on it, whether full size or micro. The data is recorded in a manner pretty much the same as on a PC hard disk. In fact I can plug a PC hard disk that has a USB cable, into my Panasonic TV.
You have either a recording problem or a playback problem. I would see what the USB port does on recording and playback. If there is a problem, them I would play the USB through a PC or laptop and see what I get. You could try the SD card on a laptop if you have a reader. I have a device that cost 99p which converts an SD card to USB.
HARRYCAT
- 16 Sep 2013 20:16
- 10324 of 11003
Thanks for your help so far Haystack. Much appreciated. I am now into the realms of SD, SDHC & SDXC and trying to fathom the differences. It may possibly be a TV fault as I have also discovered it won't read the photo album on the card, just the MPEG files. This could take a while!
Or maybe it's the formatting???
• A JPEG image modified with a PC cannot be displayed.
• Images imported from a PC must be compatible with EXIF (Exchangeable Image File) 2.0, 2.1, and 2.2.
• Partly degraded files might be displayed at a reduced resolution.
• MPEG4 view can only show moving pictures recorded by this TV, Panasonic DVD recorder DIGA or mobile camera D-snap.
• When recording in MPEG4, format the SD card with this TV. The card may not operate properly if formatted with different equipment.
• Memory cards must be formatted with FAT12 or FAT16 in order to be viewed on TV. If the card is not formatted, it may cause incompatibility with certain memory card adapters. If this happens, reformat the card using your digital camera.
• This function cannot display Motion JPEG and still image not DCF formatted (i.e. TIFF, BMP).
skinny
- 17 Sep 2013 12:44
- 10326 of 11003
Haystack
- 17 Sep 2013 12:53
- 10327 of 11003
I find that movies play best on the TV if recorded as .avi files. I download movies on a PC and play them on the TV. I usually look for downloadable files that are in .avi format.
hilary
- 17 Sep 2013 13:03
- 10329 of 11003
Klal,
Google Edimax EW-7228APn.
hilary
- 17 Sep 2013 13:30
- 10331 of 11003
When you configure it, it doesn't need to be in its final location.
Haystack
- 17 Sep 2013 13:30
- 10332 of 11003
My son had the same problem at uni. I bought him a WiFi extender. You plug it into the Ethernet socket and it broadcasts its own WiFi signal. It was about £30 pounds. He has now am bed into a large house in his second year and is using it with a 20m cable to extend the WiFi to the upper floors.
skinny
- 17 Sep 2013 13:32
- 10333 of 11003
I can't see where you put the sandwiches in!