"When we first started working on Hangar18, we'd qualified it under Windows XP to work with Blu-ray, and it worked flawlessly," product manager Marc Diana said. However, the company waited for Windows Vista before releasing Hangar18, and discovered during testing that everything wasn't working as it should be.
"What we saw was that the Blu-ray playback support wasn't working correctly with our integrated nVidia 6150 graphics. The nVidia 6150 is a great integrated graphics choice because it has on-board HDMI support and PureVideo support; it's the most recent integrated chipset on an HDMI-supported board. But we saw stuttering with the Blu-ray playback. It would look like frames were being skipped," Diana said.
For initial launch, the company integrated integrated a 7600GS card with onboard HDMI support. Other media centers on the market use higher end graphics cards, but the sleek design of the Hangar18 prevented the company from using more powerful cards. "GeForce 8-series cards are huge, they suck up power and energy, and run hot; and they're noisy," Diana said.
The company intends to bring Blu-ray to Hanger18 by the end of the summer, but for now is still investigating the conflict with AMD and nVidia.
Source:
PC World
Written by: James Delahunty @ 9 Jun 2007 5:12