2018-06-21, 03:34 PM
(This post was last modified: 2018-06-21, 03:37 PM by Holy_Diver.)
For what it's worth, this morning I had some success reproducing the home-theater mode's image filter. I've uploaded a demo (same link) with a preview. It makes picture appear much more stable, at the cost of image fidelity. What I've done is a 25/75 blend of the original 960x1080 (per eye) image and a downsampled 480x540 image. It looks good (hopefully much less sickening) but considering that most of the image is peripheral vision, we are really getting down to old-school screen resolutions.... it is back to the 90s! But, like I say, I think this is the effective resolution of the home-theater mode also. The best way to think of it is like a CRT display with so many pixels, but with some blending between them.
I decided to try my hand at this, because when I get around to programming something for cameras (I will have to program it) it's going to be a big project, so I will enjoy it much more if the picture is as satisfactory as can be.
P.S. Anyone using your PSVR, I think that I recommend not putting it as close to your face as possible, because I think that on the outer edges there is significant distortion. If you have games that don't distort on the outer edges please tell me. But what I can say is that I never noticed this problem until I tried it without my glasses on. So I recommend just wearing it as if you wore glasses, so you cannot see this distortion, except in the periphery. (I also think that if you wear it too close, you're more likely to catch glimpses of the black edges beyond the picture.)
I decided to try my hand at this, because when I get around to programming something for cameras (I will have to program it) it's going to be a big project, so I will enjoy it much more if the picture is as satisfactory as can be.
P.S. Anyone using your PSVR, I think that I recommend not putting it as close to your face as possible, because I think that on the outer edges there is significant distortion. If you have games that don't distort on the outer edges please tell me. But what I can say is that I never noticed this problem until I tried it without my glasses on. So I recommend just wearing it as if you wore glasses, so you cannot see this distortion, except in the periphery. (I also think that if you wear it too close, you're more likely to catch glimpses of the black edges beyond the picture.)