ruthan wrote:
I feel that i maybe can touch a nerve of someone who already spent lots of money on these boxes. I would really consider such big investment only if user experience would be flawless - connect and forget that your monitor has not VGA input, otherwise i would live with some workaround, or simply wait for better times.
I spent more money on the cheap boxes combined than I spent on the framemeister and gefen VGAtoDVI box combined. The cheap crap didn't work, Framemeister and the gefen box do. I should have bought them directly instead of trying to "save" money.
ruthan wrote:
Because i know market works, its nonsense to say that is big market for crap and niche market for premium and nothing between. Maybe its this state quite comfortable for present manufacturers, they just sell fewer items to less customer with huge margin and dont risk bigger investment for bigger cheaper production. Maybe is that such good middle class device and we dont know about it, or it has to come.
The market is tiny. there are enthusiasts and professionals that use gear like that and the professional market is actually shrinking because most signal chains today are more and more purely digital. In fact a lot of the (semi-)professional analogue gear we can buy used today is from companies that get rid of it because they don't need it any longer. Once all of that is gone for a while, it will get even more expensive and community driven projects like the OSSC will be the only viable options left. It is only a matter of time now when the market is only made up of the enthusiasts.
The average consumer will not bother with old hardware. They will either get things like the SNES mini, or use emulation.
ruthan wrote:
Are components used within these devices really so special and expensive even for small orders or we simply dont understand it on such low levels and assume that they are? When see OSSC and its open case, i really feel that for that price i should receive at least proper shielded box.
Yes, the components used ARE that expensive. The OSSC main chip is an altera cyclone IV FPGA IIRC, that should cost 50-100 dollar per piece. Add to that PCb manufacturing that is not particularly cheap either, all the conncetors and other ICs, and you get a rather expensive to make device. They are unliklely to make more than a few bucks of profit per unit. And that is with free community driven software development. If it was a traditional company that would do all software development in house you could expect the price to be double of what it is. the OSSC realistically *is* a bargain.
Also be glad the case is "only" lasercut acryllic, to provide a proper molded case they would have to pay 50k+ in setup costs. Granted mass production would be incredibly cheap for that case then, but considering the market size they would never make that investment back at that price.
But I am sure they would be delighted to provide you with a molded case should you donate the money necessary to produce the molds
There is a reason pretty much all community driven hardware projects have either lasercut acryllic cases or provide the files to 3d print a case yourself.
BTW, the Framemeister will go out of production once micomsoft runs out of stock of the main IC. That IC went EOL last year and micomsoft bought up all remaining stock.
ruthan wrote:
I think that nature market evolution would be that these most of these cheaper manufacturers of crappy devices will die and few of them would make products better and better to slowly much most of features of now premium ones and middle class would emerge, is not already here.
the cheap devices exist precisely *because* they are cheap. They also happen to be shit. There is simply no market big enough to support R&D for "middle class" devices or even new professional ones. Community driven projects are pretty much the only viable solutions going forward.
ruthan wrote:
On consumer electronics EDID only became relevant with HDMI because before that we had fixed "resolutions" with PAL and NTSC.
If remember correctly whole Powerstrip from W9x era was build around displays DDC/EDID info and its long time before HDMI.
personal computers don't fall under consumer electronics, consoles, mediaplayers (DVD, VHS, etc) and TVs do.
Also I did mention that EDID/DDC is from 1994. For the first few years it was also rather useless, either broken on a device or driver level or outright unsupported by cheap hardware. And everything pre-1994 obviously didn't have it.
ruthan wrote:
Retro gaming/computing has a lot of hardware that either does not support DDC/EDID at all, or so poorly that it is useless
Ok, but we can assume that we really dont need Framemeister it other unversal box which has zillions of features for VGA to DVI/HDMI thing.. also we can assume that if target device is modern LCD without VGA port, so it has DDC/EDID support => i dont see any retro element involved.
The displays EDID is only visible to the converter. Analogue signal sources dont care about EDID info of a digital Display. It is the job of the converter box to translate the analogue signal into a digital one the display can understand. That means active processing and in case the signal does not get converted properly (which will inevitably happen) you need the complex settings to compensate for issues. There is only so much that can be done automatically, you will have to manually adjust settings sooner or later.
ruthan wrote:
Its not primary about learning, its about comfort. Its like difference between car it manual and automatic transmission in car, when i have possibility to not do that stupid hand movement during driver, i choose car with automat. I want to play quick as possible not spend time on setup things. Other disadvantage from life experience that if setup it once and you its working fine.. and it take months or years to situation when you need to setup again and you again new to spent time to relearn thing, often you have couple of friend waiting behind you which want to play.. I prefer keep such things simple and automatic as possible.
An interesting analogy you made here, quite applicble, but not like you intended. It is more like that
Someone (you) who is only uesd to driving cars with automatic gearbox (digital video) now wants to use a car with manual gearbox (analogue video) but doesn't want want to deal with the complexities of a manual gearbox.
You will have to learn how to make that old hardware usable in a modern environment. You will never get the simplicity and comfort of modern digital devices with old hardware. They were never intended that way. You will have to learn how to make that old hardware usable in a modern environment and you will have to make compromises in comfort and usability.
The only easy solution for retrogaming is emulation. The moment you start playing with old hardware you will have to learn and you will have to improvise. There are no "one click" solutions for most issues you will come across. You will have to work with what actually exists, and not with what you *want* to exist.
If the current solutions are insufficient for you you have to either create a solution yourself or you have to take what exists and make it work for you. there are no magic solutions to be found.