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Rekordbox Video non-fullscreen output window title bar

Hi all,

Is there any way to remove the title bar from Rekordbox video's output window. Normally it's not a problem as at most places I run full screen but at a venue I'm starting at they have an LED wall which is only mapped to the top left of the full screen output. (pixel 0,0 to pixel 719,479)

Previously when doing this kind of gig with MixEmergency, I've just dragged the non-full screen output window (which doesn't have a title bar) to the top left of the screen and resized accordingly (ending up with an output window the same pixel size as the screen with top left corner at 0,0). The problem with RBVideo output window is the title bar remains at the top when I try to do the same meaning the actual video output doesn't start until about 20 pixels down from the top of the screen and the title bar being on display with the Mac maximise/minimise/close buttons on display. Reconfiguring the venue's LED wall processing for each gig to move the captured section of the screen down isn't an option.

As a workaround I can syphon into another program but this just seems like an additional resource being used unnecessarily.

Any ideas??

 

Cheers

 

Ben

Ben JamInn

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Unfortunately not; you'd have to make it fullscreen on the output display to have that removed.

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Thought that was currently the case. As per above, making the output full screen isn't an option as it would only show the top left 720 x 480 pixels of the image on the LED wall with the rest of the image lost. As this is quite a common way for LED walls to be installed, could the removal of the title bar while retaining position and re-sizing capability be added to the feature request list for Rekordbox Video please. As mentioned, it is possible in MixEmergency (with Syphon out of RB into ME being my current work around!)

Ben JamInn 0 votes
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Sorry, you're outlining a very specific use-case -- I've used many LED walls, and it comes down to the hardware/software handling the LED panel driving to manage the video signal. If your computer is capable of outputting 1440x900, that would be the signal sent to the LED wall input -- which would then have to scale it to match the resolution of the wall.

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