You can buy a special card that has slots to accept video and audio and has the same connectors as your TV. I can’t name of the exact type of card it is, but I’m sure you could call a computer retail store and they could point you in the right direction. Anyway it’ll probably cost you a couple of bills, at least.
What you want is called a VGA box. I don’t know if they’re made for Playstations, but I KNOW they are made for the Sega Dreamcast. Since both systems use the standard A/V out cables, you’d think they’re compatible. Maybe someone who knows video can help you out more, I’m just a video gamer.
No, the DC’s VGA box is not compatible with the PSX. The DC outputs a VGA signal to the box. All the box has to do is route the signal to the right pins on the monitor cable. The PSX doesn’t output VGA, so the DC’s VGA box can’t be used.
I have heard of a device that will change a composite A/V signal to VGA. Unfortunately, I can’t remember the name. Web searches are just turning up blanks. I’ll be able to find it eventually…
I got a TV card (by Hauppage) for my PC for about $30 US. It only has mono output, but that’s all my TV had, so it wasn’t a big deal.
You could also try Bleem! ( http://www.bleem.com ); it’s a PSX emulator for the PC that’s supposed to be pretty good. They claim to get better resolution from PSX games than the PSX itself (haven’t tried this one myself, so I can’t say).
Unfortunately, Connectix isn’t currently shipping VGS (after slortar’s comments, I had to check it out). Was the VGS only avaiable on-line, or are there retailers out there who might still have copies for sale ?
That’s a damn shame. Do they still offer it for on-line download through Digital River? It’s only a 3 mb file and a damn fine example of good programming.
If that’s not the case, ePSXe is the best bet. That’s available through zophar.net as well. While it might not be quite ready for prime time at the moment, I can almost guarantee it’ll be the best PSX emulator out there within a year. Its hardware mode is quite impressive–all the sharpness of Bleem, without the throttling problems and rendering quirks.
Nearly all of the old Commodore monitors for the C64 and early Amiga systems had a composite input. The best one for use with a console or VCR is the 1084S. The “S” stands for Stereo and it has built-in stereo speakers. I have one in my bedroom hooked up through a wireless video receiver to my cable converter, DVD, and VCR. Combined with an X10 multifunction RF remote, it works great. Avoid the 1950/1960/1942 monitors. They did not have composite inputs, IIRC. Another great monitor for multipurpose use was the old Mitsubishi DiamondScan 1381. It could handle analog RGB from 15.75KHz(Amiga) to 36KHz(PC VGA), digital RGB (CGA/EGA), and composite RGB.