Postby kngtrider » 07 Jun 2011 10:19
I don't think windows profiles put the GPU into power save - NVIDIA it has its own power save system which has worked fine since i started using that card.
ATI has power play and now something called bacon ... but i don't know how far these integrate into the OS these days
WHen i mentioned the issue to someone and the problem i found, he thought that the power saving was crippling the bus bandwidth hence the video errors
on vista pcie link power management can be on or off
on windows 7 it can be pcie/link state power management 'off' 'moderate power savings' 'maximum power savings'
On a overall level it does make sense that if the pcie link bandwidth is crippled or if there's a delay in switching the link speed it could affect some app
This isn't the first time I've seen power saving affect multimedia.
Gigabyte's proprietary power saving software called Dynamic Energy Saver interfered with system latency so much that it affected VOIP or audio latency significantly.
quick and dirty fix. when launch VLC have it set power profile accordingly.
Some commercial DVD/Bluray playback software integrate windows power profile control into the software by either overriding choice or installing a profile , Arcsoft definitely installs its own power profile , I don't remember if PowerDVD does, from my experience with the product im pretty sure it at least overrides power settings.
This is a can of worms. If VLC starts interfering with windows power profiles such as either installing its own profile, modifying existing profiles or overriding the users choice of profile, users will experience different usage behviours, battery life will be affected and worst case users batterys will prematurely accumlate wear cycles.
Going foward accelerated video and battery life is a an important topic. One of the Tier 1 vendors demoed a sandy bridge playing the entire lotr trilogy on
I think the next stage is to test wether ATI does it , and what chipsets do/don't do it. I dont have ATI PCIE on hand at the moment.
Im using a P45 chipset, the graphics card is in a pcie 2.0 slot running at the maximum spec.
How is Windows Media Player 12 or other DXVA2 enabled software handling the situation then?
Last edited by
kngtrider on 07 Jun 2011 10:36, edited 2 times in total.
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