I think I've got a nice suggestion for folks looking to get low-res consoles like the PS2 working with widescreen monitors like the Dell2405 and such: TV tuners with svideo input + Media player classic or another video tool to catch the stream and manipulate it. Works great for PS2 games - should make FFXII look very nice compared to the direct connection. Total cost: $15 for a nice USB tuner with an S-Video input + a couple minutes time to learn to use the ctrl+ number pad in MPC to adjust the screen size and position for the PS2's lame widescreen. I find it a better solution than progressive scan component cables for my uses, actually.
You may also need to get a seperate cable going to your audio card, depending on how the tuner you get works. I'd already done that when I set up my PS2 directly to my 2405.
If you use Media Player Classic, here's how to get things working:
1. Install the drivers for your TV Tuner, get it working with the lame default software.
2. Get Media Player Classic installed - the K-Lite Codec pack is good for that (http://home.hccnet.nl/h.edskes/mirror.htm) or get it directly from it's sourceforge site (http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=82303&package_id=84358)
3. Open MPC up, go to the file menu - choose open device. You should be able to pick the TV Tuner as a video source with almost any TV Tuner. I've got a cheap ultra-generic korean model (it just says "TV Box on it", no brand name, no company), and MPC picks it up fine. Pick a country code and audio source, and click OK. If you have your TV tuner hooked up, you should see some channel.
4. Go to the View->Capture menu option. A panel should open up with some details about your tuner. At the top left, is the video source - click it and go from Tuner to S-Video. If you have the PS2 on, you should see the console's output.
5. (You just need to do this once) Disable some options... unless you want to record what you're seeing (which is nice if you want to do the YouTube thing), uncheck the record video checkbox, but leave preview. If you have your audio hooked up through your sound card, then unmute that input through Windows Volume Control, and disable preview in MPC. This should keep video realtime.
6. Now, you'll want to fiddle with the aspect ratio. Right-click on the video to get the context menu. Play around with the Video Frame options - you'll quickly see the standard ways to get the basic aspect ratio options to show up... but the PS2 has some lame framing issues, especially with "widescreen" content it produces by using less pixel real-estate. To deal with this, use the menu called 'pan & scan" (don't worry about the name)- you'll see a number of options to move the video around, and stretch it.
The easiest way to deal with these adjustments at this point is to to enable number lock on your keyboard, then just use the number keys on the right. That adjusts vertical/horizontal scaling. Then hold down control and use the same keys to move the screen around. In a few seconds, you'll have a pretty good screen layout for widescreen content.
I'm sure there are other bits of software out there too - anyone else do something along these lines, and have any further suggestions?
PS2 games with widescreen content:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Progressive_Scan_PS2_Games
Then, there's also games like FFXII which will have widescreen aspect ratio, but no progressive scan.
Anyway thought I'd share all that for those who have a nice widescreen monitor, but have had bad luck with getting a good solution for PS2 games given the PS2's odd way of behaving on most wide-screen monitors.
Note: There are no known HD TV Tuners with Component In inputs within a reasonable price range - that's why S-Video is the choice in this mini-guide.
Ryan Fenton
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