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Apple Archive
Treasure Your Quadra 840av
- 2001.08.16
I received a very interesting letter with a lot of information about the Quadra 840av. James wrote:
I read your article Quadra AVs and Some Cool Things You Can Do with Them. You forgot to mention lots of amazing things about the Quadra 840av.
I love them and wrote programs to control them, because only the Quadra 840av has full featured QuickTime VDIG effects.
For example, the 840av video input can mix live video with the screen and simultaneously output a combined picture on the video out to a television at 640 x 480 or larger resolution.
That's not all. The 840av can use a mask to crop the areas to show through, and that mask need not be absolute. The Mask may be translucent or gradual using 256 levels of translucency (from an alpha channel layer). That has never been offered on any other card supporting VDIG components for QuickTime.
You can blend a live TV signal over an area of your screen if you wish to and watch TV and type at the same time on the same screen. A special extension from Apple allows you to select transparency percentage using a control slider in any and all QuickTime digitizer programs ever written. It is "AV Digitizer Options" v.1.0b1. You need this astounding free Apple extension.
But that's not all - the 840av also supports Chroma-key color index pixel substitution. You can specify which colors to allow to overlay or which to exclude. I think the limit is more than one color, perhaps 6, but it's been a while since I've used the feature.
This color key mode only works in 256 color mode, but the video being mixed will display in thousands of colors on the output.
The video chips in the 840av are miraculous. They can do more programmatically than any video card made since then.
In fact, the Power Mac 8500, which was supposed to do some of what the 840av did, was a sick joke.
You can hold down a menu with the mouse held down on a Quadra 840av, and the menu can obscure the video beneath it, as it should. This video will keep displaying live at 60 fields per second while holding the mouse button down. The crappy 8500 cannot display live video to the screen with the mouse held down in a menu. Ha! Try it with any program, including Apple's normal video capture and playback tools (Video Monitor 1.0.1). The inability to sustain live pictures is a severe disappointment.
The NeXT Dimension computer had no video mixing or display problems, and the 840av was supposed to copy most of the NeXT abilities, including offering a special ultra high speed DSP (Digital Signal Processor) modem and programmable DSP.
The 840av DSP is really cool. Other than speeding up Photoshop filters, it can add special sound filters live to your output lines, such as echo and stereoizer. Apple gave out a few free extensions to allow 840av users to use the 840av with dynamically modified sound (through mic or CD or line in, etc.) and the sound from the auto-gain inputs would be processed using the DSP chip and not slow down the Mac at all.
No Power Mac ever shipped from Apple has a secondary processor for DSP sound, just the 840av.
The 840av had fast internal SCSI, special double-speed NuBus slots, and much more. You can put two standard FWB SCSI Jackhammer NuBus cards in a Quadra 840av, and each will pump almost 20 megabytes per second into your computer.
With four Seagate 12450W hard disks, a Quadra 840av in 1995 regularly streamed data at over 34 megabytes per second to the screen memory. 34 megabytes per second! In 1994 a Sun workstation - a fast Sun workstation - couldn't write that much data to a null device that simply throws out data as it receives it in Unix. (It's called the dev/null and is usually faster than a hard disk, because it does nothing with the data.) Can you imagine such a speed in 1994? No IBM sold in 1994 could pump a third of that sustained transfer speed, not even for thirty thousand dollars.
Speaking of the screen, the screen video memory on the 8500 is pathetically slow. Worse yet, two FWB PCI cards in a 7500 are way slower than the 840av for SCSI RAID.
The 840av is astounding in many, many ways.
The 840av could pump data from one area of the computer's RAM to another without using the CPU! This is usually called DMA (Direct Memory Access), but in this case it could do it on a single span of 16 bytes. No DMA controller ever sold was optimal moving only 16 bytes at a time. The magic ability of the 840av to do this comes from the MOVE16 instruction. It is a special instruction that uses the cache controller to move data - not any registers in the Motorola 68040 CPU (neither integer not float registers are used).
The MOVE16 instruction is tricky to use, and few programmers used it, other than people like me, but by using it I was able to more than double my animation routines.
I miss the 840av technology that Apple abandoned. No Apple computer and no video card shipped since could do the tricks or match the features of the 840av.
The 840av can record audio from a turntable with no buzz or hum or interference from the motherboard or noise from its hard disk.
Try recording sound on a Power Mac - ugh! Listen to the quiet parts on a Power Mac - yucch!
The 840av was for sound and video, not just sound. It understood human speech; it had a chip called "singer" that had lots of tricks. It can record 16-bit stereo sound beautifully. You need a very expensive sound card on a Power Mac to come close to the 840av for sound input.
Treasure your 840av. Use it to encode video or sound that you later edit and process on a Power Mac. Use it with system 7.6 or 8.1 - or whatever stable OS you please.
Have fun. Spread the word about how the 840av was Apple's best
machine, because it inarguably is, especially for live video effect
manipulation.
Further Reading
- Quadra AVs and Some Cool Things You Can Do with Them, Adam Robert Guha, Apple Archive. Thanks to digital signal processors, the Quadra AVs remain useful video machines.
- Six Year Old Mac to the Rescue, Scott Atkinson, Mac Musings. The Quadra 660av has what it takes to capture stills from video for a television Web site.
- Mac AV list, an email list for 660av and 840av users
- 660av/840av Video Input Specifics, James Wang
- Quadra AV FAQ, James Wang
- Macintosh AV Series: Video Features and Subsystems
Recent Apple Archive articles
- iPods, notebooks, and other modern electronics more readily replaced than repaired, 12.07. Whether it's an intermittent failure or a broken display cable, more often than not it's cheaper to replace a broken electronics device than repair it.
- Options for replacing your older iPod, 11.19. Whether you've run out of space on your old iPod or want features it doesn't have, here are your options in new and used iPods.
- Could the $200 'green' PC with gOS Linux become a threat to Apple?, 11.14. The low cost, low power Everex desktop comes with a customized version of Ubuntu Linux, has a Mac-like Dock, and sells for $400 less than the Mac mini.
- Leopard different, a bit buggy, but worth the upgrade, 11.02. Leopard on a Power Mac G4 and a MacBook Pro: It runs well on both computers, but each has some odd bugs, and some of the changes are a step backwards.
- More in the Apple Archive index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: iMac Core Duo, Jan. 2006 - The first Intel-based iMacs ran at 1.83-2.0 GHz, came with 17" and 20" displays.
- Group of the Day: Vintage Macs is for all 680x0-based Macs, from the 128K through Quadras.
- March 16 in LEM history: 00: Cascading Style Sheets - 01: Passing of a free OS - Buying a used Mac - 06: Capture stills from DVDs - Intel unleashes OS X - Rivals can't match iPod system - 07: Pismo Spotlight woes solved - Flash-based MacBook mini speculation - Mac Pro could go 8-core
- Support Low End Mac
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Why Run Leopard on Slow G4 Macs?, Simon Royal, Mac Spectrum, 03.15. Tiger has lower demands and runs more smoothly on low-end Macs, but Leopard gives you access to more up-to-date software.
- The Apple Patient, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing, 03.15. The used 12" PowerBook has a dead screen, missing key, damaged case, and minimal memory, but it does work.
- Consumer Reports Rates Apple Tops, Macs Cost Less to Manage than PCs, 6 Core Mac Pro Soon?, and More, Mac News Review, 03.12. Also dreaming of a Mac mini on steroids, focus on word processiong, Ubuntu ditches brown for more Mac-like appearance, and more.
- iPad Ships April 3, iPhone Stand Made from Cutlery, Apple's Draconian Developer Agreement, and More, iNews Review, 03.12. Also an open letter to Steve Jobs, Apple bans cell phone radiation app, wireless iPhone charging with Case-mate Hug, new apps, and more.
- Apple Tops in Laptop Support, Rise of Netbooks Charted, 1 TB Bus Powered Hard Drive, and More, The 'Book Review, 03.12. Also Apple files for patent on notebook cooling technology, the Mac user and his i7 laptop, HP's latest Vivienne Tan netbook, and more.
- OS X 10.4 Tiger Still Very Usable on a 500 MHz G3 Mac, Simon Royal, Mac Spectrum, 03.11. For writing and basic Internet access, a 500 MHz G3 provides sufficient power and Tiger provides fairly up-to-date software.
- WPA for Original AirPort, Stainless Browser, Multiple Input Bug Persists in Snow Leopard, and More, Charles W. Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 03.11. Also kudos for Shiira, G3 vs. G4 upgrade for Pismo PowerBook, and 17" PowerBook still suffices.
- iPad Gaming Potential, Dan Bashur, Apple, Tech, and Gaming, 03.11. Two years of developing games for the less powerful iPhone and iPod touch has prepared developers to unleash the iPad's potential.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best iPod classic Deals, 03.12. Used 20 GB, $119; 40 GB, $139; 60 GB, $159; 30 GB video, $129; 60 GB, $159; 80 GB, $169; refurb 120 GB, $189; new, $214; 160 GB, $228 shipped.
- Best G3 iBook and AirPort Card Deals, 03.12. 366 MHz 12" clamshell, $89; 466, $125; 500 white CD, $100; 600, $199; 800 Combo, $239; 14" 900, $225.
- Best Xserve Deals, 03.12. Used 1 GHz dual G4, $499; 2.0 dual G5, $599; 2.3, $749; refurb 2.26 4-core Nehalem, $2,499; new, $2,699; 8-core, $3,449; refurb 2.66, $4,299; new, $4,799; more.
- Best iPod touch Deals, 03.11. Refurb 8 GB, $149; 16 GB, $199; 32 GB, $249; 64 GB, $339; new 3G/8 GB, $184; close-out 2G/16 GB, $229; 3G/32, $270; 64, $355. Shipping included.
- Best 17" MacBook Pro Deals, 03.11. Used 2.33 GHz, $1,099; 2.5, $1,349; refurb 2.66, $1,949; 2.93, $2,199; new 2.8, $2,249 after rebate; 3.06, $2,749.
- Best Mac OS X 10.5 Deals, 03.11. "Leopard" one user, $180; upgrade from 10.4, $150; 5 users, $400; Server, 10 users, $493; unlimited users, $600.
- Best iPod nano Deals, 03.10. Refurb 4G/8 GB, $99; 16 GB, $119; 4G/8 GB, $129; 16 GB, $139; new 5G/8 GB, $134; 16 GB, $160. Shipping included.
- Best 15" PowerBook G4 Deals, 03.10. 1 GHz Combo, $400; 1.25 GHz, $460; 1.33 GHz SuperDrive, $539; 1.5 GHz, $550; 1.67 GHz, $589; hi-res, $800.
- Best iPod shuffle Deals, 03.10. New 3G/2 GB, pink, $53; other, $55, 4 GB, blue, $71; other, $73. Shipping included.
- More deals in our archive.
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