Hello
what do you think about this card ? Is it good choice for future vdr with hdtv support ?
http://www.hardspell.com/english/doc/sho...=622&pageid=644 From the results we can see the HD acceleration of HD2600 and HD2400 is striking. The CPU usage is only about 5% by using 1.6GHz Sempron 2800+ to decode 1080p H.264 movies.
Igor Nikanov wrote:
Hello
what do you think about this card ? Is it good choice for future vdr with hdtv support ?
http://www.hardspell.com/english/doc/sho...=622&pageid=644
From the results we can see the HD acceleration of HD2600 and HD2400 is striking.
The CPU usage is only about 5% by using 1.6GHz Sempron 2800+ to decode 1080p H.264 movies.
Unable to see what is behind the link because the link is corrupt. But I can guess that you're talking about AMD's new line of gfx cards with UVD. Yes, nice feature and definitely takes huge amount of CPU load off. However, there are few problems: -linux drivers are missing (AMD has said to provide open source drivers but until I see them I don't believe it. ATI has never delivered open source drivers and binary drivers do not work that well - pretty ok though.)
-if you plan to receive SDTV resolution material or any other non-full HD resolution material you need to deinterlace (usually) and upscale it to full HD (assuming that you are into HD material). This will require more CPU power than what 1.6GHz Semprom will offer. Maybe these new cards will assist on that area too but not from the beginning.
At the moment it seems that NVidia provides the best gfx cards for linux HDTV usage. Hopefully AMD will provide something real to compete against NVidia.
Br, Pasi
Unable to see what is behind the link because the link is corrupt. But I
sorry, here it is http://www.hardspell.com/english/doc/showcont.asp?news_id=622&pageid=644
can guess that you're talking about AMD's new line of gfx cards with UVD.
yes, you're right - I mean AMD's card
At the moment it seems that NVidia provides the best gfx cards for linux HDTV usage. Hopefully AMD will provide something real to compete against NVidia.
do you mean Nvidia card with h264 decoder ? could you say exact type this Nvidia card
Igor
At the moment it seems that NVidia provides the best gfx cards for linux HDTV usage. Hopefully AMD will provide something real to compete against NVidia.
do you mean Nvidia card with h264 decoder ? could you say exact type this Nvidia card
E.g. 8500-series seems very good alternative. Don't know whether there is linux support for it yet.
Br, Pasi
E.g. 8500-series seems very good alternative. Don't know whether there is linux support for it yet.
yes, as far as I understand this link http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=91896 there's linux drivers for this card, but the support of technology for h264 acceleration - NVIDIA® PureVideo™ didn't include in it :(
Igor
Igor Nikanov wrote:
E.g. 8500-series seems very good alternative. Don't know whether there is linux support for it yet.
yes, as far as I understand this link http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=91896 there's linux drivers for this card, but the support of technology for h264 acceleration - NVIDIA® PureVideo™ didn't include in it :(
Well, this is hardly news to me. None of these advanced features are implemented in Linux drivers for some reason. Same goes for AMD/ATI.
I'm hoping that Intel makes an exception with their 3000 series. It may not be fast in 3D but if they provide open source driver with accelerated decoding of HD materian then I'll switch to Intel the second. There should be either available or to become available also a stand-alone card and not just a mboard with integrated solution (this does not interest me due other reasons).
Br, Pasi