![]() |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| Welcome to Windows Vista Forums. Our forum is dedicated to helping you find solutions with any problems, errors or issues you are experiencing with Windows Vista. The Vista forum also covers news and updates and has an extensive Windows Vista tutorial section that covers a wide range of tips and tricks. |
| |||||||
![]() |
| |
| | #1 (permalink) |
| | xbox 360 connect to laptop windows VISTA moniter? how do i connect my xbox 360 to my windows vista basic laptop moniter? |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #2 (permalink) |
| | RE: xbox 360 connect to laptop windows VISTA moniter? jakepittman, I found the following on the Internet (google is your friend): Connecting an Xbox to a PC Monitor Note - this method is only for playing Xbox on a PC Monitor, but will give you the best picture quality. It is possible to connect the Xbox to a VGA display with very very good results. The key to obtaining good results is to avoid the basic line doubler devices available from places like Lik Sang. They take the basic 480i signal from the Xbox and convert it from interlace to progressive scan. This works but looks very poor. To get truly great results, you need to tap a quality Xbox signal. By taking the native 480p, 720p, or 1080i signal from the Xbox and displaying it directly on the VGA device, you get exceptional results. This is not line doubling the 480i signal. You must use the direct output from the Xbox or transcode component to VGA. There are two devices on the market that do this both very well and inexpensively. The X2VGA (http://www.x2vga.com/) is a device that connects directly to the Xbox and uses the native output to provide a VGA signal. The VDIGI VD-Z3 (http://www.vdigi.com/index.php?optio...id=4&Itemid=27) is a component to VGA transcoder. This provides equally great results but provides the flexibility to use any device that can provide a component video signal (not just Xbox). This is vastly different than those cheap line doublers mentioned earlier that accept composite and S-video inputs from any source. These devices do not transcode and will not provide the same level of results. I personally use the VD-Z3 and absolutely love it. You can't really go wrong with either product. Using a Laptop as an Xbox Display Generally, this is NOT possible. The video (S-Video, VGA) connections on laptops are OUTPUTS. They will not accept an in-bound signal. In order to get anything on the screen from an external source, you need a Video Input. It may be possible to connect an external Video Capture device to the laptop and use an composite or S-Video cable from the Xbox, but these connections are limited to 480i and the results may not be optimal in any case (i.e. - it may lag a bit, see below for more details). -- freddy "jakepittman" wrote: > how do i connect my xbox 360 to my windows vista basic laptop moniter? |
My System Specs![]() |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| Moniter doesnt recogonize Nvidia 9300GE anymore! instead it says "default moniter"! | Graphic cards | |||
| Using Notebook as Xbox 360 moniter | General Discussion | |||
| connect to messenger on xbox live through XBOX 360 | .NET General | |||
| Re: Ran windows update on Vista laptop IE will not connect to the | Vista security | |||
| Can't connect Windows Vista Desktop to XP Laptop | Vista networking & sharing | |||