Yes. First you'll need - if you don't already have one - a TV-out on your computer, then you'll need a wireless 'TV sender' to attach the TV-out to. You won't need any dedicated software, but a nice multimedia remote control for your host computer (with associated infrared hardware) would make a fine addition. :-)
If your computer doesn't have TV-out, consider replacing the graphic hardware (graphic card) with one that does (they're cheap enough these days).
And as a final touch, add some HTPC - Home Theatre PC - software to your machine (see sources for Windows and Linux packages) if you're not running Windows Media Center Edition or Vista. (Vista has Media Center built-in.)
2007-03-13 14:49:21
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answer #1
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answered by Simon D 3
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The lag stated via LG isn't the enter lag. i've got in no way seen a television maker or lcd video show maker checklist the enter lag. this is the reaction time of the liquid crystals themselves. often, any lcd panel with physique interpolation (what 120hz relatively is) creates added lag. physique interpolation demands great quantities of calculations and it slows issues down. once you're staring at a blu ray to illustrate or HD cable, if the calculations reason a very undesirable lag, it is not a controversy for the reason which you're no longer gaming or surfing the internet, the lag must be 2 seconds, it is not significant. yet then human beings attempt to sport and discover out the difficult way that lag would properly be terrible. It varies from set to set so there is no thank you to offer you any figures. the only thank you to do away with this added lag is to coach the 120hz or 240hz off, yet no longer all TVs and pc screen instruments allow you to coach this off. you will ought to seek the boards and spot what game enthusiasts with a similar or comparable video show ought to declare approximately it.
2016-11-25 01:13:07
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes but basically you need either an XBox 360; a very expensive piece of kit capable of reading uPnP media servers or (don't laugh) another PC wired to your tv via an S-Video connector and a phono adapter and access media via a network share.
Alternatively you could put your existing PC closer to the TV and run a wire over.
2007-03-13 11:24:50
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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yes but you will have to buy the equipment for you to be able to do so like a media center box
2007-03-13 11:10:16
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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