viewtopic.php?p=264825#p264825Where exactly is the GPU_decoding_enable switch in the Tools/Preferences/ALL settings menu ?
Exactly.
Of course it is there, in the codec->ffmpeg settings...That is in the Tools/Preferences/SIMPLE not the ALL settings menu.
Is this some sort of joke ?
I tried that weeks before but it did not have any effect.Of course it is there, in the codec->ffmpeg settings...That is in the Tools/Preferences/SIMPLE not the ALL settings menu.
Is this some sort of joke ?
And the exact answer is still Preferences (Show Settings = ALL) -> Input/Codecs -> Video Codecs -> FFmpeg, then on the right panel, at the bottom of the Decoding section, the option Hardware Decoding is there.Where exactly is the GPU_decoding_enable switch in the Tools/Preferences/ALL settings menu ?
Exactly.
You are confusing FFDshow to FFmpeg. They are different tools. VLC cannot use FFDshow.My experience with ffmpeg is that when it runs it likes to identify itself by name
with numerous notification icons at the bottom right of the Windows screen.
I do not believe what I have said reached to the extent you allege.And complaining at the limit of insulting people or asking if it is a joke is the right way to do it?
VLC only supports GPU decoding with newer display adapters. Radeon X1950XT is too old for VLC.Why with "Media Player Classic - Home Cinema" I can view mkv (720p) smoothly with my slow processor (Ahtlon Xp 3200+ and Radeon X1950XT) and this doesn't with VLC, even with GPU support activeted?
Not AFAIK. FFmpeg/libavcodec that both VLC and MPCHC use are very similar, but they are used in different way these players.Are the same developers working on Media Player Classic ?
Thank you, sir.I plan on submitting this to the AMD bug reporter; this seems more their problem than that of VLC.
Code: Select all
--ffmpeg-skiploopfilter={0 (None), 1 (Non-ref), 2 (Bidir), 3 (Non-key), 4 (All)}
Skip the loop filter for H.264 decoding
Skipping the loop filter (aka deblocking) usually has a detrimental
effect on quality. However it provides a big speedup for high
definition streams.
The issue still exists on the Catalyst 12.7 beta. I've submitted a bug report to AMD as I've had the same issues you've detailed and do believe it is more on AMD's end as the issue didn't exist in the Catalyst 12.4 drivers.With VLC 2.0.1, attempting to use GPU decoding for H.264 video with the Catalyst 12.6 betas and a Radeon 5870 seems to result in corruption, potentially due to lost frames. I don't know much about H.264 video in general, but the corruption reminds me of what one might see while suffering from poor digital TV reception. The video anomalies seem to be most problematic when a large portion of the screen moves. Turning off all of the video processing options in the Catalyst Control Center seems to have no effect. Flash player video in the browser does not seem to suffer from this issue.
Uninstalling only the driver component of 12.6, and then installing the official Catalyst 12.4 drivers seems to fix the problem. It isn't possible to downgrade directly to the 12.4 drivers, so expect to be asked to reboot.
Finding easily accessible video, that is in the public domain, that is small in size and shows the problem in an obvious manner was not easy:
Download the Quicktime version of the video on each page:
http://www.csb.gov/videoroom/detail.asp ... =1&F_All=y
The title screen looks odd to begin with, the type is not of uniform brightness. The video eventually cuts to recorded footage, and for no obvious reason the camera pans down, the corruption should become fairly obvious.
http://www.csb.gov/videoroom/detail.asp ... =1&F_All=y
This motion in this video ends up being lost almost entirely. Once the explosion occurs, it looks literally like a slideshow.
I plan on submitting this to the AMD bug reporter; this seems more their problem than that of VLC.
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