LICENZA Windows 11 PROFESSIONAL - Sticker + DvD
Nel tuo PC troverai installato e aggiornato:
Microsoft windows 11 pro - licenza ufficiale. Sticker adesivo COA.
Licenza a vita, riattivabile in caso di formattazione. Valida per 1 solo pc.
Questo prodotto contiene esclusivamente il codice di
attivazione stampato su
una Etichetta con Secure
Code da grattare per la rivelazione del codice. Il prodotto non contiene
Supporto Multimediale
Il prodotto è protetto da garanzia a vita, che consente
ove necessario, la sostituzione del prodotto nel caso in cui i
nostri tecnici non riescano ad
individuare il problema entro 6 ore dallapertura della
segnalazione.
Requisiti di Sistema:
Processore: 1 gigahertz
(GHz) o superiore
RAM: 4 GB
Spazio su disco rigido:16
GB per sistemi a 32 bit, 20 GB per sistemi a 64 bit
Scheda video: DirectX 12 o
versioni successive
Display:720p
Until Paramount sees sense, the 2020 AI upscale of Deep Space Nine Season One remains the gold standard. Watch it. Cherish it. And remember—the AI may have filled in the blanks, but the soul of the show is all human. Have you watched the 2020 AI upscale of DS9 S01? Share your thoughts on the quality compared to the original DVDs in the forums. Live long and prosper.
No, it’s not perfect. Yes, the shadows sometimes swim. But when Major Kira first confronts Sisko in "Emissary," and you can finally see the fire in her eyes without pixelation, you understand: this is what happens when algorithmic love meets artistic legacy.
On DVD, this visual identity falls apart. Compression artifacts (blocky squares around moving objects), aliasing (jagged edges on curved lines like the Promenade’s railings), and color banding (visible gradients in shadows) plague the experience. Watching “Emissary” on a standard DVD via a 65-inch 4K TV is a painful experience: Sisko’s uniform looks like a mosaic, and the wormhole’s swirling CGI is a sea of pixelated blocks.
Enter the fan community. In 2020, a project labeled simply as began circulating on private trackers and fan forums. To the uninitiated, the filename looks like a typo-laced mess. To the dedicated Trekkie, it represents a holy grail: Season One of DS9, reimagined at 1080p using bleeding-edge artificial intelligence.
For decades, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine has lived in a peculiar purgatory. While The Next Generation received a lavish (if controversial) Blu-ray remaster, and The Original Series got glowing HD touch-ups, DS9—along with Voyager —remained trapped in the amber of standard definition. Shot on 35mm film but edited on standard-definition video tape, the series has never had a true HD release.