Wednesday, 9 February 2011

Over 4500 HD Quality Channels

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Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Watch Over 3500 Channels Directly On Your Computer

Satellite Direct are offering a deal where you can get TV on a PC and watch over 3500 channels on your PC or Mac:

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- You get over 3500 channels
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Monday, 7 February 2011

How To Link Your Computer To Your TV

TV on a PC is needed to then link your PC to your own television in order to watch thousands of channels. The TV you watch can take the stream directly from the back of your computer via a video output. TV on a PC loosely means any video on your PC, for the sake of clarity when we refer to TV on a PC we mean all video but it could be your local TV on a PC, or it could be a video playing from your hard drive.

So you want to watch a movie that is playing on your computer and output this to a TV, but don't know where to start?


This simple guide explains the basics. Chances are, you just need one cable...

The procedure is the same for Desktop or Laptop computers:

What type of output does the computer have?




Top left:
Standard VGA Output, most computers will have this even on the motherboard's own video chip.

Top right:
S-Video - this will not give you the same level of quality as the other three.

Bottom left:
DVI interface - most new graphics cards have this as standard, some have two of this same output. 

Bottom right:
HDMI output.

All you need to do then is get hold of the right cable.

If you want the best quality, you should use HDMI if you have it.

If you do not have HDMI, use DVI.

If you do not have either HDMI or DVI, use the normal VGA (the first blue output above).

It is very unlikely that your computer would only have the S-Video connector, but possible.

If you have an old CRT TV then it could only have the S-Video input.

Remember - if you only have one VGA output on your computer, your computer's monitor will already be plugged into it, so you will not see the blue slot. It might have two screws on the plug you need to unscrew to remove the monitor's plug, so your VGA cable coming from the TV can be plugged into the back of the computer.

Your monitor might already be plugged into the white slot (DVI) which is usually on a graphics card. Some graphics cards actually have two identical DVI slots for this very purpose - so you can have your normal computer monitor plugged into one of them and your TV plugged into the other, so one computer is displaying the screen on a monitor and a TV at the same time.

All you need to do next is change the TV channel to pick up what's coming from the input.

In most instances you will need just that one cable that has to go from the computer's output to the TV's input.

TV input:

If you have a CRT TV (old box type, 4:3 aspect ratio, curved glass screen) it will probably have the S-Video input. If so, you need a "VGA to S-Video" converter box like this:

Then you will also need a VGA cable with VGA on both ends.

If you want to get the most out of your viewing, set up TV on a PC so you already have a lot of channels to give to your TV in the corner.

If you have one of the newer TV's (16:9 aspect ratio normally, flat plastic screen) all you need is a VGA cable, you do not need the converter box.

For HDMI you only need a HDMI to HDMI cable, assuming there is one on your computer.

The only thing you need to do really is make sure you get the right cable for going from a computer to a TV. For example you can get "DVI to HDMI" cables - so no converter box is needed.

In fact you do not need a converter box unless you only have a S-Video output on your TV or on your computer, or both. In all other cases you would just need a cable, thats it, one single cable.

With a S-Video only setup (S-Video on both the computer and the TV) you need a cable with one end that plugs into the S-Video computer output and speaker out. The other end of this cable plugs into one of the RCA video and audio inputs on your CRT TV.

To get the most out of your television, you first should set things up so you have TV on a PC, then that PC can stream out to your actual TV. It gets confusing to explain this stuff when "TV" can mean the network's programmes and it can also mean "that box in the corner".