Hi,
I have exactly the same problems.
I tried out with the "sintel" movie (
www.sintel.org), the "1024x436" mp4 variant.
VLC 1.1.11 uses around 15% CPU power,
VLC 2.0.1 uses around 35-45 % CPU power.
YES: I turned the audio track off. This does not change the results at all.
PC is an Asus EEEPC Laptop, Atom N270 (1.6Ghz) CPU (yes I know that this CPU is pretty slow
).
The playback in general tends to "stutter" with VLC 2.0.1 version.
The VLC 1.1.11 version seems to be quite smooth (no detectable stutter as far as I can tell.)
One more thing:
The VLC 2.0.1 video quality also seems to be worse than the VLC 1.1.11 one
(even if the VLC 2.0.1 one uses more CPU power).
The effect is, that the color smoothness (no idea what word would explain it better) is worse in VLC 2.0.1.
The sintel movie starts with a lot of white (snow covered mountains). With VLC 2.0.1 you see pretty strong "steps" in color instead of a smooth transition from very white to medium white. With VLC 1.1.11 I cannot detect the same problem, so the transition from very white to medium white looks much smoother.
Note: I checked the video settings and as far as I can tell they are the same for VLC 2.0.1 and VLC 1.1.11. So I use nothing extra (no post-processing, no de-interlacing,...)
Is there anything more I can tryout to help the diagnosis what happens ?
Is VLC 2.0.1 just using a different video decoder or is it the backend to display the video ?
cheers
lundril