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Optimize Your New HDTV [HDTV]

Whether you purchased your HDTV yesterday or last year, there’s a big chance you just plugged it in and fired it up. Tweak your HDTV for better viewing quality. Photo by blakespot.

While HDTV has a pretty awesome picture, and you've likely been enjoying your screen just fine how it is, your television didn't come out of the box pre-programmed for your living room. Your HDTV came out of the box preset for a showroom floor, with the settings cranked up to compete with a wall of other HDTVs to induce that certain feeling of, "Oh my God, I can't believe how HD-riffic this is!" Your living room is not the same as a showroom floor for a myriad of reasons—bright polo shirts and tube fluorescents among them—so the best viewing experience requires a few display setting switches.

For those with a factory default tube, the New York times put together a crash course in tweaking your television. Most of their advice, as you would imagine, involves cranking things down from their eye-searing in-store levels. Start by controlling the external lighting as much as possible, then start tinkering with your settings starting with the brightness:

A picture’s black level is controlled by the TV’s brightness adjustment; it needs to be set dark enough so that the screen displays rich, deep blacks. Set too low, many images will lose their detail. Set the black level too high, the picture will look muddy.

Black level is important because the truer the blacks, the greater the perceived sharpness of the TV image. A muddy picture will look less sharp than one that has true blacks.

To get the proper black level, you can use a PLUGE pattern, which typically consists of six vertical bars of varying black levels. Turn the picture level down until one of the bars disappears against the background. PLUGE patterns, and other patterns discussed here, are available on a variety of TV tuning discs.

Once you’ve got a handle on your brightness, don’t neglect the contrast and colors. But wait! Don’t run out and spend money on a calibration disc. Not only are there tons of free test patterns a Google Image search away, but there are hundreds of DVD movies that include test patterns tucked in the bonus features.

Check out the full article below for tips for your other HDTV settings.





EncodeHD Offers One Click Conversion for Popular Portable Devices [Downloads]

If you’re looking for a fire-and-forget way to bulk encode your media, EncodeHD is a drag-and-drop video solution with support for for over a dozen devices.

Like many video encoding programs, EncodeHD is a friendly GUI for some less user-friendly but really powerful tools. Under the interface of EncodeHD are some open-source powerhouses like FFMpeg, Atomic Parsley, and MP4Box. The result is an easy to use interface with some strong encoding juice under the hood. EncodeHD has presets for over a dozen popular media devices include the Apple TV, iPod, iPhone, iPod Touch, Blackberry, PSP, Playstation 3, and more. You don’t get granular control over the individual settings, but you do get drag, drop, and forget it convenience with optimized settings. For more video encoding goodness, check out our top 10 list of video rippers and encoders. EncodeHD is freeware, Windows only.





NetVideoHunter Downloads Videos From Popular Video Sharing Sites [Downloads]

Firefox: If you’d like to save a video you’ve found on a popular streaming video site, NetVideoHunter is a handy Firefox extension that makes that download a snap.

Most extensions and add-ons enabling video downloading usually place a single link by the Flash video box on certain sites, letting you download the file you’re currently watching. NetVideoHunter places a small icon in the lower right corner of your browser, tracking the videos you’ve watched.

Clicking on that icon will bring up a list of videos, including the current one you’re watching. From that list you can download or play the files. The ability to grab previously viewed videos is rather handy if you’ve decided, after tunneling through a YouTube chain, that you’d like a copy of that video three clicks back. It works on nearly any video sharing site including YouTube, Google Video, Metacafe and Dailymotion.

NetVideoHunter is free and works wherever Firefox does.





Academic Earth Aggregates Lectures from MIT, Harvard, Yale, and Others [Education]

Web site Academic Earth is like Hulu for academic lectures, pulling free lectures from Berkeley, Harvard, MIT, Princeton, Stanford, and Yale into one attractive, easy to navigate site. It’s incredible.

The site clearly takes its cues from Hulu and iTunes on its design, but it’s ten times better than either, because it’s open. The videos can be embedded anywhere or downloaded and enjoyed wherever you want to take them. It’s easy to use, has tons of great content, and it doesn’t cost a dime.

We’ve highlighted these free courses before individually, like MIT’s OpenCourseWare or Stanford’s Engineering Everywhere, and we rounded up even more of them when we showed you how to get a free college education online, but Academic Earth takes the idea to an even better place. We love it.





Convert MKV Files for Playback on PlayStation3 [How To]

If you have some videos in the .MKV format you’re itching to play on your PlayStation3, check out this simple tutorial for converting them using mkv2vob.

We’ve talked about how to rip DVDs for your PlayStation3 before. BitBurners.com takes on the digital-to-digital route, explaining how to covert both .MKV and .TS (ripped DVD video files) into a PlayStation3-compatible format. Along with the basic software how-to, you’ll learn how to transfer them to your PlayStation3. If you’re interested in going a little further with your PS3 than simply converting files to play on it, make sure to check out how to install Ubuntu Linux on your Playstation.





iPodME Converts Your Video to iPod Friendly Format [Downloads]

Windows only: If you’re looking for a fire-and-forget video converter to help stock your iPod, iPodME is a dead simple and lightweight tool for bulk converting your video files.

iPodME is a completely portable standalone application—a GUI wrapper of the venerable ffmpeg for the curious among you. Operation is as simple as running the application, dragging and dropping a list of video files you want to convert onto it, and adjusting the basic video settings. You can select the video dimensions and the quality using the plain English metric provided–slow, quality or turbo, size for instance—to determine the conversion speed. If you dig into the options menu you can also tweak the process priority. The default for the application is to take advantage of idle cycles and back off when you're actually attempting to do work. Using the fast, quality setting and leaving it on the default of idle, it took approximately one hour to convert 20 episodes of Fraggle Rock into iPod-compatible MP4 files. An unexpected bonus in such a small package is support for SRT subtitle files, if you have them for your favorite foreign media you can embed them as you convert. If you’d like more fine tuned control over your video conversions, check out the candidates in the Hive Five Best Media Converters and the Top 10 Free Video Rippers, Encoders, and Converters to fulfill your tweaking needs.






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