1. What is the purpose of the computer? What all applications and games are you going to run? (Be exact. Which games? Which applications? Avoid the word 'et cetera.' Vague answers like 'gaming' or 'office work' will not work.)
Ans: My usage is 3D modelling and computational design (Rhinoceros...
Hey everyone.
My budget is 70K.
My usage is 3D modelling and computational design (Rhinoceros 3D and Grasshopper), rendering on Keyshot, competitive FPS shooters (Valorant, CS:GO) and AAA offline titles at 1080p, high quality.
CPU: max I can spend is 30K. Right now torn between Ryzen 5 5600x...
Darn it. How did I miss that. Thanks a lot. So now I guess I have two options:
1. Get a GPU that supports 4K over HDMI or display port. If its the latter I'll have to use a display port to HDMI adapter, which is very had to come by and also kinda expensive (for an adapter)
2. Get a media box...
Yes I've been trying to play clips downloaded from that source only. I've tried mp4 (Panasonic Lumix Demo & SpaceX launch footage) and encm (Mad Max) so far. Will try mkv now.
I'll try an external HDD but it doesn't require any additional power source. So will it make any difference? I'll try and update. The manual doesn't say anything about codecs.
The manufacturer's manual says its a HDMI 1.4 port. But the only way to get the max resolution output is by using the display port. I read that here. Besides, the laptop can manage a max of 2K whereas I want to play 4K. So this sounds doable by using a dedicated GPU capable of 4K on a desktop...
So apparently the laptop I have uses a "mux-less software-switched design where only the Intel GPU has a physical connection to the display panel". I read that here. So there is no way to bypass the integrated graphics. But I can't seem to understand. The integrated graphics Intel HD 3000 is...
So I scaled down the 4K videos to full HD (keeping bitrates and everything else the same) and the resultant files had almost the same bitrate as their original 4K source files. And I was able to play these converted files (with bitrates as high as 18 Mb/s) over USB. So the TV can handle high...
Alright. So do you think using the HDMI port labelled "4K/2K" should work? Also, how do I use that port without hooking it up to a PC? A media box (Blu-Ray player etc) ? Any recommendations for that? I just want to conveniently hook up a USB drive and watch 4K content.
I have tried H.264 (AVC and AAC) with .mp4 container
I have also tried H.265
I have converted videos using Pavtube HD Video Convertor to different profiles (Panasonic TVs, Matroska Videos and a few custom made Matroska profiles). None of these worked
My TV, for the record, does play Matroska...
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