What's the best way to play 1080p on a rather slow machine? Like, some super-optimized media player or something. Just curious, since it'd be leet to use my lappy (Pentium M 1.6GHz, Radeon 9200 64MB, 512MB) for HD playback when I get the projector Like, have the docking station plugged in and just ka-chunk the computer onto there.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
i have a radeon 9200 256mb
i want to kill myself
i want to kill myself
coreAVC seems to be best for x264 encoded movies
once upon a midnight dreary, while i pron surfed, weak and weary, over many a strange and spurious site of ' hot xxx galore'. While i clicked my fav'rite bookmark, suddenly there came a warning, and my heart was filled with mourning, mourning for my dear amour, " 'Tis not possible!", i muttered, " give me back my free hardcore!"..... quoth the server, 404.
1080 is more than twice as high of a resolution than 720. And as for the rest of the system, it's about twice-trice as fast as my laptop. A radeon 9200 is DX8.1 ffs. (Well, PS1.4, but still officially DX8.1).Sup wrote:
My HTPC specs: 3500, 7600GT, 2gb RAM. TV is 720p and video is very smooth.
@Jenspm, I don't buy my movies. Only fags buy their movies.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
I actually prefer purchasing movies.Freezer7Pro wrote:
1080 is more than twice as high of a resolution than 720. And as for the rest of the system, it's about twice-trice as fast as my laptop. A radeon 9200 is DX8.1 ffs. (Well, PS1.4, but still officially DX8.1).Sup wrote:
My HTPC specs: 3500, 7600GT, 2gb RAM. TV is 720p and video is very smooth.
@Jenspm, I don't buy my movies. Only fags buy their movies.
Guaranteed highest quality possible, no need for Burning, etc.
No chance of running 1080p content smoothly on that rig. Not with proper audio.Freezer7Pro wrote:
What's the best way to play 1080p on a rather slow machine? Like, some super-optimized media player or something. Just curious, since it'd be leet to use my lappy (Pentium M 1.6GHz, Radeon 9200 64MB, 512MB) for HD playback when I get the projector Like, have the docking station plugged in and just ka-chunk the computer onto there.
Last edited by Bertster7 (2008-03-22 15:31:32)
1080p .mkv x264 rips played back though a HTPC ftw!Jenspm wrote:
I actually prefer purchasing movies.Freezer7Pro wrote:
1080 is more than twice as high of a resolution than 720. And as for the rest of the system, it's about twice-trice as fast as my laptop. A radeon 9200 is DX8.1 ffs. (Well, PS1.4, but still officially DX8.1).Sup wrote:
My HTPC specs: 3500, 7600GT, 2gb RAM. TV is 720p and video is very smooth.
@Jenspm, I don't buy my movies. Only fags buy their movies.
Guaranteed highest quality possible, no need for Burning, etc.
once upon a midnight dreary, while i pron surfed, weak and weary, over many a strange and spurious site of ' hot xxx galore'. While i clicked my fav'rite bookmark, suddenly there came a warning, and my heart was filled with mourning, mourning for my dear amour, " 'Tis not possible!", i muttered, " give me back my free hardcore!"..... quoth the server, 404.
sure, but my rig doesn't have HDMI or Optical Audio.max wrote:
1080p .mkv x264 rips played back though a HTPC ftw!Jenspm wrote:
I actually prefer purchasing movies.Freezer7Pro wrote:
1080 is more than twice as high of a resolution than 720. And as for the rest of the system, it's about twice-trice as fast as my laptop. A radeon 9200 is DX8.1 ffs. (Well, PS1.4, but still officially DX8.1)
@Jenspm, I don't buy my movies. Only fags buy their movies.
Guaranteed highest quality possible, no need for Burning, etc.
well you can use a DVI --> HDMI adapter and a decent soundcardJenspm wrote:
sure, but my rig doesn't have HDMI or Optical Audio.max wrote:
1080p .mkv x264 rips played back though a HTPC ftw!Jenspm wrote:
I actually prefer purchasing movies.
Guaranteed highest quality possible, no need for Burning, etc.
once upon a midnight dreary, while i pron surfed, weak and weary, over many a strange and spurious site of ' hot xxx galore'. While i clicked my fav'rite bookmark, suddenly there came a warning, and my heart was filled with mourning, mourning for my dear amour, " 'Tis not possible!", i muttered, " give me back my free hardcore!"..... quoth the server, 404.
I just did... Full HD, scaled down to 1280p width, stereo sound. If it'll do it without scaling down on the projector remains a mystery until I get it.Bertster7 wrote:
No chance of running 1080p content smoothly on that rig. Not with proper audio.Freezer7Pro wrote:
What's the best way to play 1080p on a rather slow machine? Like, some super-optimized media player or something. Just curious, since it'd be leet to use my lappy (Pentium M 1.6GHz, Radeon 9200 64MB, 512MB) for HD playback when I get the projector Like, have the docking station plugged in and just ka-chunk the computer onto there.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Well that's not even close to 1080p with proper sound then is it.Freezer7Pro wrote:
I just did... Full HD, scaled down to 1280p width, stereo sound. If it'll do it without scaling down on the projector remains a mystery until I get it.Bertster7 wrote:
No chance of running 1080p content smoothly on that rig. Not with proper audio.Freezer7Pro wrote:
What's the best way to play 1080p on a rather slow machine? Like, some super-optimized media player or something. Just curious, since it'd be leet to use my lappy (Pentium M 1.6GHz, Radeon 9200 64MB, 512MB) for HD playback when I get the projector Like, have the docking station plugged in and just ka-chunk the computer onto there.
That's 720p, with stereo audio. BIG difference. 2.25x lower quality video and (I'm guessing here, 192kbps opposed to say 768kbps for DTS or 448 for AC3). It's a big difference.
well then look at my "laggy videos" thread. Thats a full 1080i with a 8800GT 512 and a 2x 3000mhz processor. I only get 28 fps. I think that answers your question doesn't it?Freezer7Pro wrote:
1080 is more than twice as high of a resolution than 720. And as for the rest of the system, it's about twice-trice as fast as my laptop. A radeon 9200 is DX8.1 ffs. (Well, PS1.4, but still officially DX8.1).Sup wrote:
My HTPC specs: 3500, 7600GT, 2gb RAM. TV is 720p and video is very smooth.
@Jenspm, I don't buy my movies. Only fags buy their movies.
28fps is NORMAL!.Sup wrote:
well then look at my "laggy videos" thread. Thats a full 1080i with a 8800GT 512 and a 2x 3000mhz processor. I only get 28 fps. I think that answers your question doesn't it?Freezer7Pro wrote:
1080 is more than twice as high of a resolution than 720. And as for the rest of the system, it's about twice-trice as fast as my laptop. A radeon 9200 is DX8.1 ffs. (Well, PS1.4, but still officially DX8.1).Sup wrote:
My HTPC specs: 3500, 7600GT, 2gb RAM. TV is 720p and video is very smooth.
@Jenspm, I don't buy my movies. Only fags buy their movies.
In fact it's more frames than you should have. Should be about 25. The fact it's running at 28fps might be why it's laggy, because the video should never have been encoded to that frame rate.
Your video isn't 1080i anyway, it's 632x324. Not even close to HD.
Last edited by Bertster7 (2008-03-22 16:15:24)
no wonder why it looks crap... lol... there is your problem .supBertster7 wrote:
28fps is NORMAL!.Sup wrote:
well then look at my "laggy videos" thread. Thats a full 1080i with a 8800GT 512 and a 2x 3000mhz processor. I only get 28 fps. I think that answers your question doesn't it?Freezer7Pro wrote:
1080 is more than twice as high of a resolution than 720. And as for the rest of the system, it's about twice-trice as fast as my laptop. A radeon 9200 is DX8.1 ffs. (Well, PS1.4, but still officially DX8.1)
@Jenspm, I don't buy my movies. Only fags buy their movies.
In fact it's more frames than you should have. Should be about 25. The fact it's running at 28fps might be why it's laggy, because the video should never have been encoded to that frame rate.
Your video isn't 1080i anyway, it's 632x324. Not even close to HD.
3930K | H100i | RIVF | 16GB DDR3 | GTX 480 | AX750 | 800D | 512GB SSD | 3TB HDD | Xonar DX | W8
I know it's a huge difference between 1080 and 720, but it's a 1080 file scaled down to fit the screen. The ammound of data processed by the processor should be the same, right?Bertster7 wrote:
Well that's not even close to 1080p with proper sound then is it.Freezer7Pro wrote:
I just did... Full HD, scaled down to 1280p width, stereo sound. If it'll do it without scaling down on the projector remains a mystery until I get it.Bertster7 wrote:
No chance of running 1080p content smoothly on that rig. Not with proper audio.
That's 720p, with stereo audio. BIG difference. 2.25x lower quality video and (I'm guessing here, 192kbps opposed to say 768kbps for DTS or 448 for AC3). It's a big difference.
As for the audio, it's all I'm ever gonna use and the sound card supports anyhow. I don't have a 5.1 system, and I'm not gonna get one, unless someone gives it to me for free.
Videos aren't like games, Sup. Videos very rarely play at more than about 25-30FPS. And playing a 600x300 video file in fullscreen does not make it a HD video. It makes it a small crappy 600x300 video expanded to HD size. By far not as much data to be processed..Sup wrote:
HD vids play fine and the low res. dvixs suck lol i'm really confused now.
Last edited by Freezer7Pro (2008-03-22 16:25:36)
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Not really. Depends what it is. If it uses any sort of MPEG4 compression it'll be object based and so won't be so apparent at lower display resolutions. Is it 1080p25? I always think of 1080p as being 1080p50 or even 1080p60. Makes a huge difference. That rig is extremely unlikely to playback a 1080p50 MPEG4 stream properly.Freezer7Pro wrote:
I know it's a huge difference between 1080 and 720, but it's a 1080 file scaled down to fit the screen. The ammound of data processed by the processor should be the same, right?Bertster7 wrote:
Well that's not even close to 1080p with proper sound then is it.Freezer7Pro wrote:
I just did... Full HD, scaled down to 1280p width, stereo sound. If it'll do it without scaling down on the projector remains a mystery until I get it.
That's 720p, with stereo audio. BIG difference. 2.25x lower quality video and (I'm guessing here, 192kbps opposed to say 768kbps for DTS or 448 for AC3). It's a big difference.
As for the audio, it's all I'm ever gonna use and the sound card supports anyhow. I don't have a 5.1 system, and I'm not gonna get one, unless someone gives it to me for free.
I've tried watching a 1080p50 Divx6 encode of 300 with DTS on a laptop with a 1.6GHz Centrino in and a 6600Go, was like watching a slideshow with the audio totally out of sync, running at about .8fps.
Last edited by Bertster7 (2008-03-22 16:34:12)
oOBertster7 wrote:
Not really. Depends what it is. If it uses any sort of MPEG4 compression it'll be object based and so won't be so apparent at lower display resolutions. Is it 1080p25? I always think of 1080p as being 1080p50 or even 1080p60. Makes a huge difference. That rig is extremely unlikely to playback a 1080p50 MPEG4 stream properly.Freezer7Pro wrote:
I know it's a huge difference between 1080 and 720, but it's a 1080 file scaled down to fit the screen. The ammound of data processed by the processor should be the same, right?Bertster7 wrote:
Well that's not even close to 1080p with proper sound then is it.
That's 720p, with stereo audio. BIG difference. 2.25x lower quality video and (I'm guessing here, 192kbps opposed to say 768kbps for DTS or 448 for AC3). It's a big difference.
As for the audio, it's all I'm ever gonna use and the sound card supports anyhow. I don't have a 5.1 system, and I'm not gonna get one, unless someone gives it to me for free.
I've tried watching a 1080p50 Divx6 encode of 300 with DTS on a laptop with a 1.6GHz Centrino in and a 6600Go, was like watching a slideshow with the audio totally out of sync, running at about .8fps.
Maybe I got 1080p25 with some low audio quality, but it played smoothly, at least.
I propably won't be using this thing for HD video playback anyhow, mainly made this thread to see if it was possible to playback HD on it after what I saw VLC do. (VLC gave me about three frames a minute)
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Doesn't matter. Just get stuff in 720p, which is fine. 1080p content tends to take up vast amounts of hard drive space. If it's on a Blu-Ray disk then it's fine, but otherwise not worth the space.Freezer7Pro wrote:
oOBertster7 wrote:
Not really. Depends what it is. If it uses any sort of MPEG4 compression it'll be object based and so won't be so apparent at lower display resolutions. Is it 1080p25? I always think of 1080p as being 1080p50 or even 1080p60. Makes a huge difference. That rig is extremely unlikely to playback a 1080p50 MPEG4 stream properly.Freezer7Pro wrote:
I know it's a huge difference between 1080 and 720, but it's a 1080 file scaled down to fit the screen. The ammound of data processed by the processor should be the same, right?
As for the audio, it's all I'm ever gonna use and the sound card supports anyhow. I don't have a 5.1 system, and I'm not gonna get one, unless someone gives it to me for free.
I've tried watching a 1080p50 Divx6 encode of 300 with DTS on a laptop with a 1.6GHz Centrino in and a 6600Go, was like watching a slideshow with the audio totally out of sync, running at about .8fps.
Maybe I got 1080p25 with some low audio quality, but it played smoothly, at least.
I propably won't be using this thing for HD video playback anyhow, mainly made this thread to see if it was possible to playback HD on it after what I saw VLC do. (VLC gave me about three frames a minute)
Yeh, I will/am. This computer has a nice 1280x800 screen to watch 720p at at night when I won't be using the projector.Bertster7 wrote:
Doesn't matter. Just get stuff in 720p, which is fine. 1080p content tends to take up vast amounts of hard drive space. If it's on a Blu-Ray disk then it's fine, but otherwise not worth the space.Freezer7Pro wrote:
oOBertster7 wrote:
Not really. Depends what it is. If it uses any sort of MPEG4 compression it'll be object based and so won't be so apparent at lower display resolutions. Is it 1080p25? I always think of 1080p as being 1080p50 or even 1080p60. Makes a huge difference. That rig is extremely unlikely to playback a 1080p50 MPEG4 stream properly.
I've tried watching a 1080p50 Divx6 encode of 300 with DTS on a laptop with a 1.6GHz Centrino in and a 6600Go, was like watching a slideshow with the audio totally out of sync, running at about .8fps.
Maybe I got 1080p25 with some low audio quality, but it played smoothly, at least.
I propably won't be using this thing for HD video playback anyhow, mainly made this thread to see if it was possible to playback HD on it after what I saw VLC do. (VLC gave me about three frames a minute)
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
But night is the perfect time to use a projector!Freezer7Pro wrote:
Yeh, I will/am. This computer has a nice 1280x800 screen to watch 720p at at night when I won't be using the projector.Bertster7 wrote:
Doesn't matter. Just get stuff in 720p, which is fine. 1080p content tends to take up vast amounts of hard drive space. If it's on a Blu-Ray disk then it's fine, but otherwise not worth the space.Freezer7Pro wrote:
oO
Maybe I got 1080p25 with some low audio quality, but it played smoothly, at least.
I propably won't be using this thing for HD video playback anyhow, mainly made this thread to see if it was possible to playback HD on it after what I saw VLC do. (VLC gave me about three frames a minute)
With that said, I think I'm going to go and watch something on mine....
In my room, it's night all day... *Backs off into the shade*Bertster7 wrote:
But night is the perfect time to use a projector!Freezer7Pro wrote:
Yeh, I will/am. This computer has a nice 1280x800 screen to watch 720p at at night when I won't be using the projector.Bertster7 wrote:
Doesn't matter. Just get stuff in 720p, which is fine. 1080p content tends to take up vast amounts of hard drive space. If it's on a Blu-Ray disk then it's fine, but otherwise not worth the space.
With that said, I think I'm going to go and watch something on mine....
Also, lulz @ 720p Karma
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP