(more recently, there have been a few crashes, but mainly when doing odd things like mixing fast-forward with the MCD booting/loading while changing some settings and with several other programs running in the background -and some other specific cases that don't qualify as normal use) I've been using 3.64 for over a year on my Vista 32 laptop with no problems in normal use. If you are using Windows, dont use 3.64, too many bugs.
(though it shouldn't be an OS-specific thing) Not sure what Macs do (hardware or software wise), but specific configurations of hardware and software could certainly avoid those problems. which is the problem with some older GEM LCD VGA monitors we have -a real pain since certain BIOS stuff wont show up at all due to the default video mode used -unless you have a video card/driver that automatically scaled/scan-converts to the monitor's native settings) (most VGA/SVGA monitors won't sync below 31 kHz, and some LCD sets have a fixed v-sync rate too -some won't handle 70 Hz stuff properly. Without scaling, some monitors (especially LCDs) won't work at particularly low resolutions, or at certain sync rates. (the onboard Nvidia 7150 can't handle 320x200 in DirectX, though OpenGL seems to be fine -320x240 and higher are also fine)
and some drivers/display devices won't support certainly resolutions at all.
#Kega fusion emulator full screen driver#
Some cards automatically scale low-res fullscreen to higher resolutions and/or sync-rates (or have options to do so in the driver settings), but some don't that (and some don't support it by default). Problems with fullscreen in windows usually has little to do with the OS and more to do with the video card and driver. On windows it's normal and it's caused by the retarded way windows handles native fullscreen.
#Kega fusion emulator full screen mac osx#
The freaking out of the monitor is more strange though, if you are using Mac OSX that shouldn't happen. What you need to do is change the aspect ratio configuration, put it in Fixed Aspect (Fit). What operating system are you using? Mac OSX? I think that's the only one without a resolution option (because you shouldn't change the resolution on a mac, there's no advantage for something like an emulator). as any good linux user would say, WorksForMeâ„¢.