jboede@juniper.uucp (Jon Boede) (06/30/88)
I'm posting this for a friend who owns an ST. She's more artistic than technical and my knowledge of the ST is woefully limited, so please forgive my ignorance. What she'd like to be doing is saving some of her graphics on her VCR. Does the ST produce composite video? Would it be better to go with a commercial RGB -> NTSC converter? Does anybody have experience with one that they would recommend?? Please mail me as I never seem to be able to find time to read news :-) Thanks!! -- Jon Boede jboede@juniper.UUCP, jon%bodedo@cs.utexas.edu 1301 Trace Dr. #204, Austin, TX 78741-1735 (512) 462-3287 "People who are incapable of making decisions are the ones that hit those barrels at freeway exits."
hase@netmbx.UUCP (Hartmut Semken) (07/06/88)
In article <2797@juniper.uucp> jboede@juniper.uucp (Jon Boede) writes: >I'm posting this for a friend who owns an ST. She's more artistic than >technical and my knowledge of the ST is woefully limited, so please forgive >my ignorance. > >What she'd like to be doing is saving some of her graphics on her VCR. > >Does the ST produce composite video? Would it be better to go with a Hmm, maybe the american 520 STM does. The "original" 520 ST (no M!), 1040 STF and the like does not. All You get here ist RGB-analog; my VCR can handle that... hase -- Hartmut Semken, Lupsteiner Weg 67, 1000 Berlin 37 hase@netmbx.UUCP High on a rocky promontory sat an Electric Monk on a bored horse. (D. Adams)