I've heard rumors that some move archival enthusiasts have developed Laserdisc capture hardware which samples RF directly off the laser pickup, for theoretically-ideal capture quality. Anyone know if there's any truth to that, and how to get in touch with such a person if so?
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If you don't feel that it's worthwhile to try to capture laserdiscs with as high accuracy as possible, then you're more than entitled to your opinion. And I appreciate your help with the LCD games. But respectfully, if you want to tell me how to spend my time, get bent.
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If you don't want to help with preserving Laserdisc games, that's perfectly fine too, but MAME hardly needs someone trying to wave people off from an admittedly idealistic goal. Your arguments have all been made before, and we dare to dream to do better.
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Yes, the "white flag" is there, but that controls player operation. It's not application data, and it isn't output even by the OEM players used in the games, so clearly the games don't depend on it. It is almost trivial to reconstruct the white flag from a video signal.
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On many Laserdiscs, the white flag wasn't even correctly generated, which resulted in artifacts when pausing the video. I'm willing to accept that the game discs probably had correctly encoded white flag, but it's still not magic and is easy to generate.
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