When you opened a screen shot of a video in Paint, the video was playing in it
14 comments
·October 16, 2025edgineer
BearOso
Video rendering can still be done with overlays, but it's a little more substantial, involving separate planes with the locations configurable on the graphics card. Look up MPO, Multi-Plane Overlay.
Your green stripe is likely because of the classic combination of unclamped bilinear filtering and a texture that's larger than the output region being used as the drawing surface for the video.
jadamson
I did some Googling on your behalf as I remember having something like that but can't reproduce it right now:
https://old.reddit.com/r/OLED_Gaming/comments/1kovgdx/green_...
I'd make sure your drivers are up to date before fiddling with Chrome flags though.
huflungdung
[dead]
dixie_land
Iirc you can also set that "green screen" as wallpaper and have video as desktop background!
cluckindan
Or you could set the WinAmp AVS visualizer to render to overlay, and have it as your desktop background.
OCTAGRAM
This was a nice trick to protect text from copying. For instance, student assignments. Students could still use digital camera on CRT display, but 20 years ago cameras were costly and students did not have them. And typing text from scratch was a tedious job. So online served assignments were not shared too fast.
nomel
I made extensive use of this, when I found it by accident, in my Winamp skins and GUI programs!
5-
i had forgotten about this technique when i was at the excellent https://tnmoc.org recently, looking at their sgi irix exhibit featuring a webcam.
the latency of the camera feed on the crt screen was unbelievable even (especially?) by modern standards!
after a minute of pure wonder i remembered about overlays. still mighty impressive.
stefan_
The irony is that in 2025, this answer is now wrong again. Starting with smartphones, scanout hardware supports multiple planes/overlays again that are composited on the fly by fixed function blocks. This bypasses having to power on the GPU and wasting memory bandwidth (a large amount of power use in a smartphone). No longer involves hacks with green pixels though.
janwl
This unlocked some memories. I remember on my system the chroma colour not being green but some very dark shade of grey that was almost black but not really black… something like #010101
precommunicator
I've used that trick as far as Windows XP, playing videos inside 3D models in programs like SketchUp
halyconWays
I had a Matrox Millenium card with a breakout box for capturing RCA, S-Video, and Cable TV; I'd watch TV on my Windows 98 SE2 computer, which was the craziest thing back then, but I always felt like the green-screen like effect was some kind of mysterious bug that I'd better not mess with, or video capture would break. Windows 98 was barely working on a good day, so it felt like the computer was in the process of failing in a graceful and useful way, so I'd better not push my luck.
Every so often you could get a glimpse of the man behind the curtain, by dragging the window quickly or the drivers stuttering, which would momentarily reveal the green color (or whatever color it was) before the video card resumed doing its thing. Switching between full screen and windowed mode probably also revealed the magic, or starting a game that attempted to grab the video hardware context. And of course sometimes other graphical content would have the exact right shade of color, and have video-displaying pixels.
zaptheimpaler
If you watch Twitch, you can see that all instances of the same emote in chat animate together. Then I tested this more generally in a web page, and the same thing happens - if the same gif is placed multiple times in a page, all instances of that gif will play in sync even if loaded at different times. I guess there's a similar idea in browsers then, where maybe there's only one memory representation of the gif across the page or the browser.
"Nowadays, video rendering is no longer done with overlays."
Darn, I thought this explained why, after upgrading my GPU, videos playing in Chrome have a thin green stripe on their right edge.