Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson Posted December 23, 2014 Share Posted December 23, 2014 Got my NX1 yesterday. Did some minor testing. Tried to play the files in vlc....did not work well. Then I tried this one: http://mpc-hc.org/The Media Player Classic works like a charm, even on my getting old pc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hitfabryk Posted December 23, 2014 Share Posted December 23, 2014 Do you know if there is a player for Mac, to check the footage from the NX1? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted December 23, 2014 Administrators Share Posted December 23, 2014 Very interesting, thanks Ivar! What's your system spec, in particular the graphics? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Taranis Posted December 23, 2014 Share Posted December 23, 2014 Yeah MPC-HC can play H265, but it needs CPU power. I downloaded the UHD files from imaging-resource.com when they first came out. My i7-3770 can play them, but all the cores are used up to 100%, and the playback is not perfectly fluid. I don't have a dedicated graphics card, but I guess it wouldn't help.EDIT: just downloaded the newest 1.7.7, they made a huge improvement in HEVC playback. Now the core usage goes up to 60%, and NX1 UHD plays perfectly!! Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson and Hitfabryk 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DigitalEd Posted December 23, 2014 Share Posted December 23, 2014 Great find..Very useful..Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson Posted December 23, 2014 Author Share Posted December 23, 2014 Very interesting, thanks Ivar! What's your system spec, in particular the graphics?Processor: Intel Core i7 CPU 860@ 2.80GHz, 2798 Mhz, 4 Core(s), 8 Logical Processor(s) 16gb memory and Gigabyte Nvidia GTX 580 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson Posted December 23, 2014 Author Share Posted December 23, 2014 Do you know if there is a player for Mac, to check the footage from the NX1? I am sorry, I do all my video work on PC(I used to be a Mac guy).....sooooo much cheaper Hitfabryk 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GMaximus Posted December 23, 2014 Share Posted December 23, 2014 EDIT: just downloaded the newest 1.7.7, they made a huge improvement in HEVC playback.Ahh, that makes the first post much more reasonable. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson Posted December 23, 2014 Author Share Posted December 23, 2014 Ahh, that makes the first post much more reasonable.Hey, you don't trust me GMaximus? hehe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GMaximus Posted December 24, 2014 Share Posted December 24, 2014 Hey, you don't trust me GMaximus? hehe It just didn't make sense for me, been using MPC for years, tried it with h.265 for sure, it didn't use hardware acceleration and was as slow as VLC.But they did improve h.265 playback in v.1.77:LAV Video: HEVC decoding is up to 100% fasterTicket #4783, LAV Video: Experimental support for hardware (CUVID and DXVA2) assisted decoding of HEVC streams (disabled by default)Have to try DXVA with it. Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted December 24, 2014 Administrators Share Posted December 24, 2014 I'd expect the same improvements to come to VLC on the Mac soon. Won't be long to wait. I'm surprised a general purpose Intel CPU can playback H.265 fluidly in software with no hardware support. Good news all round! Perhaps Adobe can get it working in Premiere after all and we won't need special support from the GPU (980 GTX onwards) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson Posted December 24, 2014 Author Share Posted December 24, 2014 I'd expect the same improvements to come to VLC on the Mac soon. Won't be long to wait. I'm surprised a general purpose Intel CPU can playback H.265 fluidly in software with no hardware support. Good news all round! Perhaps Adobe can get it working in Premiere after all and we won't need special support from the GPU (980 GTX onwards)Yeah, I was suprised also and there have been no hiccups at all. Look at these benchmarks Andrew: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/geforce-gtx-780-performance-review,3516-26.htmlIt seems the GTX 580 was a very powerful card when it came to cuda performance. I think Nvidia did not like how close their gaming cards where getting to they're Quadro cards(which cost alot more). But since MPC doesn't use hardware acceleration this probably doesn't matter. But does help in premiere Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted December 24, 2014 Administrators Share Posted December 24, 2014 Yes the 580 was a great card since NVidia probably make 90% of their money from consumer gaming cards I don't think they'd cripple the line to protect the tiny niche Quadro line. The Quadro line has more stuff for pros than just performance.How does the latest NVidia card do for compute and CUDA? Must be better than the GTX 580 by now! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson Posted December 24, 2014 Author Share Posted December 24, 2014 Yes the 580 was a great card since NVidia probably make 90% of their money from consumer gaming cards I don't think they'd cripple the line to protect the tiny niche Quadro line. The Quadro line has more stuff for pros than just performance.How does the latest NVidia card do for compute and CUDA? Must be better than the GTX 580 by now!Tom's Hardware forum: http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/answers/id-2412153/nvidia-gtx-970-580.htmlIt depends on the task. Results for AE are very different, the *only* card from the 700 series that alwaysbeats the 580 for any test is the 780 Ti. Check reviews (I have, extensively, and I've tested a lot of cards).For CUDA, a 980 is slightly slower than two 580s, about 10% less, and I was testing with a good 980 (1266MHz core).Thus, a 970 will be a bit slower still.Hence, a 970 should be faster than one 580 for CUDA, but make sure the app supports Maxwell V2 CUDA, becausenot all apps do yet (AE doesn't).Also, performance isn't purely related to absolute throughput. Indeed, one reason why the 580 is strong for CUDAis that its high bw is shared across fewer cores, providing a lot more bw per core. Other reasons include a 2X highershader clock than later cards, etc. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Frozone Posted December 24, 2014 Share Posted December 24, 2014 On Mac You can try Kodi (former XBMC) which can play h.265. But CPU only. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
peterwhite Posted December 30, 2014 Share Posted December 30, 2014 And if someone who don't know how to play it on media player or want to load your videos into some NLEs, recommend to convert them. But .....quality drop is must thing to encounter. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sandro Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 I tried the latest version of MPC-HC (that I've been using for years with LAV) that includes the latest version of internal LAV filters but on my PC 4k files are not smooth, I have a i5-3570k overclocked @ 4Ghz. Also with external LAV (0.65) I get the same results.Weird since my CPU is supposed to be much better than the i7 860 Ivar Kristjan Ivarsson has! Unless you're using some sort of HW decoding from the Nvidia GPU. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DBounce Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 You do know that most high-end smartphones can play back H.265?Snapdragon 805 and up all have hardware support for the new standard. Additionally, most high end smartphones have QHD screens, which is higher resolution than FHD. So if all you want to do is play back, you probably have a device in your pocket that can get the job done. Don't take my word for it, YouTube streams H. 265 here's a sample below. make sure to select 2160p as the resolution:https://youtu.be/bgnDEZAjLhI Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sekhar Posted May 26, 2015 Share Posted May 26, 2015 YouTube streams H. 265 here's a sample below. make sure to select 2160p as the resolution:Google actually uses its own codec VP9 for 4K, it's a rival to HEVC/H.265. This CNET article has some info on the current status if you're interested. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DBounce Posted May 26, 2015 Share Posted May 26, 2015 See for yourself, H.265 is fully supported on Snapdragon 805 and up. Google's VP9 is also supported. There are some H.265 files at the below link.http://www.h265files.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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