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TI Shows Off Impressive, Experimental Wayland Demo

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  • curaga
    replied
    So come back when you have 1080p playback in weston on r-pi ;-)
    On fully open drivers too, no?

    Leave a comment:


  • robclark
    replied
    Originally posted by scottishduck View Post
    Exactly.

    A dual core ARM system shouldn't have any issues with 1080p, especially when you consider the raspberry pi can do it just fine.
    Playing one 1080p clip is not too impressive. (And to be precise, it was actually a 2k clip.) OMAP4430 and up can play two 1080p clips in parallel on bare metal

    The challenge comes to integrate the video with the UI. So come back when you have 1080p playback in weston on r-pi ;-)

    Leave a comment:


  • blackiwid
    replied
    Do I get it right we dont get 1080p video without a 5ghz cpu (I am go over the top here a bit ^^) with intel or amd hardware so there hardware-video-encoding without cpu is closed but we get 3d from them.

    And this qualcom arm guys go exectly the other way? 3d is in a closed rotten blob but hardware-video-shit is in the free driver?


    Is there not even a change to get gnome-shell 3d without software-crap go running without that blob grap?

    Hmm at the moment because there are no real free drivers for arm-grafic chips... I run away from arm as fast as I can... I would rather pay double the price for a amd netbook/notebook/tablet/whatever and have 1/4 the batterie time before I buy such tegra crap or something like that.

    But if they get somewhat good gnome-shell working and 3d (all with free drivers logicaly) I maybe buy some ultraflat cheap arm thing thats passive
    Last edited by blackiwid; 29 August 2012, 07:39 AM.

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  • Almin
    replied
    I wonder whether I can use Wayland with on the Rasbeery Pi. Is it possible at this point? I've seen a video, but I don't know whether that's Wayland how it is out-of-the-box or maybe a patched one...Are their any special drivers needed to run Wayland on an Rasberry and can I use the regular sources of Wayland and compile it on Arch Linux (ARM) for the Rasberry Pi? Or will this be possible in the future?

    Leave a comment:


  • gsedej
    replied
    It's not really ARM which decodes, but special HW. In case of PandaBoard HW decoder is called Ducati.

    Leave a comment:


  • vitiv
    replied
    Originally posted by boot View Post
    I really don't see how this is impressive...
    Well, you're right, it isn't impressive that a decent ARM can hande 1080p just fine. It's impressive that they have come so far with Wayland, though.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheCycoONE
    replied
    Originally posted by [Knuckles] View Post
    Is is just me, or does the video being played back suffer from tearing?
    Playing a camcorder copy of a video on a screen through a player that probably isn't tear free itself - I think it would be pretty hard to tell. At very least the camcorder's frames wouldn't be synced with the video.

    Leave a comment:


  • scottishduck
    replied
    Originally posted by boot View Post
    I really don't see how this is impressive...
    Exactly.

    A dual core ARM system shouldn't have any issues with 1080p, especially when you consider the raspberry pi can do it just fine.

    Leave a comment:


  • boot
    replied
    I really don't see how this is impressive...

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  • [Knuckles]
    replied
    Is is just me, or does the video being played back suffer from tearing?

    Leave a comment:

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