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A 3D Understanding Of ATI's R600/700 Series

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  • A 3D Understanding Of ATI's R600/700 Series

    Phoronix: A 3D Understanding Of ATI's R600/700 Series

    Late last year AMD had released R600/700 3D code and in late January had then released R600 3D register documentation to begin work on an open-source driver stack supporting the latest ATI Radeon GPUs with 3D acceleration. One of AMD's partners in this open-source work has been Novell, which wrote an open-source utility to begin sending 3D commands to the GPU in a very primitive form and to analyze the different operations...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    From the first minutes of the video it seems it is pretty useless again. Very bad hissing and sound only on the left channel. And you cannot read the slides. But better than nothing...

    I suggest you to look at the real slides from matthias' blog
    This year's Xorg DevRoom on Fosdem was a great success. We had a room with a capacity of approx. 150 people, and it was at least 60-80% full all the time. I held two talks that were pretty crammed (actually, on the RandR 1.3 talk the room was completely full, and people weren't allowed to get in…


    ----> http://www.vis.uni-stuttgart.de/~hop...emo_Slides.pdf

    while listening to the "vid". And again flash crap. What a pity!

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    • #3
      Originally posted by bugmenot View Post
      Very bad hissing and sound only on the left channel.
      It's going through in mono? Ugh, damn microphone / cable adapter.
      Michael Larabel
      https://www.michaellarabel.com/

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      • #4
        Flash

        Please, for the love of god, no more Flash. You are documenting an open source conference, you could at least use an open codec. Moreover, the audio is unusable in this video. At least if we had a real video file someone could extract and cleanup the audio.

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        • #5


          Gnash and swfdec are Free Software and can both run SWF files, including those that play FLV videos.

          FLV is an open specification. Please quit whining about nothing.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by elanthis View Post
            http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flv/

            Gnash and swfdec are Free Software and can both run SWF files, including those that play FLV videos.

            FLV is an open specification. Please quit whining about nothing.
            Strictly speaking, the FLV container format is open. The codecs which are used with it, however, are heavily patent encumbered. Moreover, it took me over ten minutes to finally grab the FLV itself, only to find that my usual tools for video manipulation are useless with the format.

            All of this could be easily avoided by simply putting up a Theora file up alongside the Flash video.

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            • #7
              Mplayer can playback flv too...

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              • #8
                For those who care, the FLV can be found at http://blip.tv/file/get/Phoronox-08r...ip.tv&source=1.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by elanthis View Post
                  http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flv/

                  Gnash and swfdec are Free Software and can both run SWF files
                  The flash app does not work here with gnash.
                  For a normal video there is no flash necessary. So it is simply stupid to use, because you depend on it.

                  There are flash video players that work with gnash, but this one used here does not. There should be at least a link to the normal video.

                  Stop whining that we complain about that useless crap.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by bugmenot View Post
                    Stop whining that we complain about that useless crap.
                    Uh... Several answers have been given out. A FOSS codec means it's useful to us, but not to the other communities out there- and we'd like to show everyone what we're accomplishing as much as anything else (and moreover, not everyone's reading this on Linux but Windows machines, some poor souls are stuck on Windows 7 or XP because of circumstances like work machines (or in deanjo's case, the only way he can interact with his computer- he's driving a repurposed Netbook with Dragon Naturally Speaking (There's an area we probably ought to look into fixing next... ). Severe burns on his hands and he's lucky to be alive, if the pic he showed in another forum is any indication of his injuries in the mishap...). While Ogg Theora's nice, it's not used much outside of the FOSS crowd right at the moment. If you don't want to use Flash I suggest nabbing the video via one of the Firefox Flash grabbers and either transcode it to a different format or a different container- or just use Mplayer like Kano suggested.

                    Bitching about it gains nothing. If you don't like the circumstance of things like this, you can always can-opener the damn thing (That's what I do) and provide it to someone else. If you don't have those skillsets, that's fine too- just ASK instead of bitching and I suspect someone would be more than happy to accommodate you.
                    Last edited by Svartalf; 12 February 2009, 02:49 PM.

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