IronManForever
IronMan; Ready to Roll...
Hey guys ;
This is my PC specification.
Intel Celeron D 2.26 GHz 256 kB L2
ECS P4M800-M Via Motherboard VT8237 Southbridge
1GB DDR 400
Eagle - NVidia GeForce FX 5200 128 MB 128 bit AGP
Seagate Barracuda 80 GB 7200 RPM
MoserBaer/Lite-ON DVD-RAM Drive
Samsung 920NW 19” Widescreen 1440x900
I am a codec/multimedia noob. Yesterday, I went through an article and I found it intresting. I came to know a lot about codecs, compression, HD videos, etc.
Then, I wanted to try out some videos in my PC. I foraged through the whole room and couldnt find anything much. But I have Digit December 2007 DVD which had trailers of games like Timeshift, Guitar Hero, in 720p. I played it on my PC. And it played pretty well, though CPU usage was like 99% with WMP-9 and 95% with VLC.
I haven't installed any extra codecs on my PC, just installed VLC to satisfy all those uncommon-media file-playing needs.
I don't know which kinda compression was used but I guess it was MPEG-2 as Windows Media Player could play it and I don't think WMP can play others like x.264/h.264, XviD, DivX, etc by default. The file format was *.wmv BTW.
Now as my PC was thrashed by a simple 720p video with stereo sound, I dont know what would it be like when I play 1080p x.264 in it.
But according to many websites that I have read, it shouldn't be impossible if I tweak it a bit.
Here's a tip-off CoreAVC
Here people are playing 1080p x.264 in their PC with the help of the CoreAVC codec on a system thats similar to mine, like having only 512 MB RAM(I got 1GB; yeah RAM hasn't got much to do here, I know but having less is always a bottleneck) and a processor like mine .
Even in Microsoft's Website recommended system for 1080p HD has 3.0 GHz P4 HT. It should be much more than that isn't it? That means that with a bit of tweaking, I maybe able to play 1080p in my PC?
Also a 128 MB Graphics card is recommended in that MS site. But that's kinda lame isn't it? What's the GFX card got to do if it doesn't have a Hardware decoder/accelerator built in? Like my FX 5200 is 128 MB but it does not have a Hardware decoder other that MPEG-2. Even my onboard has MPEG-2 acceleration. Man this sux. :angry:
And I may not be able to play 1080p x.264. But I should be able to play 1080p MPEG-2. And that would mean I can leave my computer on overnight for converting x.264 to MPEG-2 and view the content the next morning; smart isn't it?
Guys please give some advice on it... ::waiting::
This is my PC specification.
Intel Celeron D 2.26 GHz 256 kB L2
ECS P4M800-M Via Motherboard VT8237 Southbridge
1GB DDR 400
Eagle - NVidia GeForce FX 5200 128 MB 128 bit AGP
Seagate Barracuda 80 GB 7200 RPM
MoserBaer/Lite-ON DVD-RAM Drive
Samsung 920NW 19” Widescreen 1440x900
I am a codec/multimedia noob. Yesterday, I went through an article and I found it intresting. I came to know a lot about codecs, compression, HD videos, etc.
Then, I wanted to try out some videos in my PC. I foraged through the whole room and couldnt find anything much. But I have Digit December 2007 DVD which had trailers of games like Timeshift, Guitar Hero, in 720p. I played it on my PC. And it played pretty well, though CPU usage was like 99% with WMP-9 and 95% with VLC.
I haven't installed any extra codecs on my PC, just installed VLC to satisfy all those uncommon-media file-playing needs.
I don't know which kinda compression was used but I guess it was MPEG-2 as Windows Media Player could play it and I don't think WMP can play others like x.264/h.264, XviD, DivX, etc by default. The file format was *.wmv BTW.
Now as my PC was thrashed by a simple 720p video with stereo sound, I dont know what would it be like when I play 1080p x.264 in it.
But according to many websites that I have read, it shouldn't be impossible if I tweak it a bit.
Here's a tip-off CoreAVC
Here people are playing 1080p x.264 in their PC with the help of the CoreAVC codec on a system thats similar to mine, like having only 512 MB RAM(I got 1GB; yeah RAM hasn't got much to do here, I know but having less is always a bottleneck) and a processor like mine .
Even in Microsoft's Website recommended system for 1080p HD has 3.0 GHz P4 HT. It should be much more than that isn't it? That means that with a bit of tweaking, I maybe able to play 1080p in my PC?
Also a 128 MB Graphics card is recommended in that MS site. But that's kinda lame isn't it? What's the GFX card got to do if it doesn't have a Hardware decoder/accelerator built in? Like my FX 5200 is 128 MB but it does not have a Hardware decoder other that MPEG-2. Even my onboard has MPEG-2 acceleration. Man this sux. :angry:
And I may not be able to play 1080p x.264. But I should be able to play 1080p MPEG-2. And that would mean I can leave my computer on overnight for converting x.264 to MPEG-2 and view the content the next morning; smart isn't it?
Guys please give some advice on it... ::waiting::
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