That Voodoo, II Do, So Well.

I’ve been working sporadically on a computer project at home, one designed to provide a means of viewing video files (specifically digisubbed anime, but other files as well) on the 32” TV in the living room. Towards that end I’ve been fighting with the proprietary ATI Radeon drivers for Linux. Oh, I’ve sort of made them work, but they’re quirky and forgetful and a major PITA to work with.

This evening I was looking through my boxes for slide rails with which to mount the Livedrive bay unit into the machine in question when I came across an old piece of video hardware: My old Canopus Pure3D II. It’s a 3dfx Voodoo2 accelerator card from back before all video cards did 2D and 3D combined.

It also sports S-Video and composite outputs.

Turns out, it is also natively supported in modern Linux distributions. Well, isn’t that handy?

I dropped that critter into the chassis (along with the Livedrive, since the slide rails I needed were in the same box as the Canopus card) and, after surprisingly little futzing around, managed to generate signal out of the S-Video port. It took a few tries to find a screen resolution and refresh rate that would generate a useful signal, but even that only took up about twenty minutes.

On a side note, I also used apt to perform a massive upgrade on my Fedora Core 1 install. In this instance, the ‘apt-get dist-upgrade’ command resulted in almost 150 package downloads. Wow.

Anyway, my next step is to see if I can manage 800×600 out of the S-Video port, and then I get to start setting up software. If all goes well, by this time next week I’ll have a working multimedia computer down in the living room. Excellent!

Comments

8 responses to “That Voodoo, II Do, So Well.”

  1. Kylanath Avatar

    He’s just wanting to show off anime in the living room to a particular person when she’s there next week visiting that’s all. *smirk*

  2. Kylanath Avatar

    He’s a geek and needs to show off geeky things =)

    I should hope he’s more interested in showing off other, more interesting things as well. *smirk*

  3. IRQuick Avatar
    IRQuick

    Those ATI drivers were not really written for the consumer products like you have. They were written for the workstation boards and then “ported” (and not well I might add) for the consumer boards.

    Also, TV’s really only have 480 scan lines. If your TV is a 4:3 TV, then 640×480 is really all you need.

    Sorry, I just felt that there wasn’t enough support here for your geekiness. Geek on brother.

  4. GreyDuck Avatar

    Ian! Long time no see, man. And, yeah, I know I don’t need more than 640×480, but it would still be kind of nice to have so I can actually use the GUI to some useful extent. I’ll manage if I have to, though.

    When the ATI FireGL drivers work, they work very very well. When they don’t, though, they just sorta don’t work at all. It’s not quite as bad as some of the early nVidia driver releases… ye gods, those were horrid.

  5. Lilith Avatar
    Lilith

    I have not a clue as to what that all means. You are indeed the supreme Geek Fu Master!

  6. Lilith Avatar
    Lilith

    I would think he’d be far less interested in showing off the anime in the living room than something that’s NOT on a screen in the bedroom! *smirk*

  7. Jared Avatar
    Jared

    If you ever need a place to download Fedora Core 2, the ISP I work for is mirroring it. We’re based out of Canby, OR. so it should be a pretty quick download.

  8. Jared Avatar
    Jared

    oops forgot the url: mirror.web-ster.com