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<blockquote data-quote="mm1352000" data-source="post: 1145321" data-attributes="member: 82144"><p>I don't know what options you have, but the simple modes are often called "bob" and "weave". Check your GPU control/config software. For example, my AMD HD 4670 has (from best/hardest to worst/easiest):</p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">weave</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">bob</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">adaptive</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">motion adaptive</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">vector adaptive</li> </ul><p>That's hardware deinterlacing.</p><p></p><p>If using LAV, you have the option to disable/enable hardware/GPU deinterlacing (I suggest you try both options). When enabled, you probably have to disable high quality to keep the load as low as possible. You also have the software YADIF option. It's nice but very processor intensive, so I advise to avoid it. I don't know if the "deinterlacing mode" setting is hardware or software (I suspect software), but try "disabled (progressive)".</p><p></p><p></p><p>As above: in LAV it is called "software deinterlacing" (compared with "hardware/GPU deinterlacing"). Names/terminology varies from codec to codec.</p><p></p><p>[edit: Forgot to say, make sure you try to turn off post processing (AA, filtering, dynamic contrast etc.) features in the GPU config software... and try different V-sync options.</p><p></p><p>Of course, some settings (eg. disabling v-sync) may give sub-optimal results. You have to decide how much video quality you're willing to sacrifice to have this low power system.]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mm1352000, post: 1145321, member: 82144"] I don't know what options you have, but the simple modes are often called "bob" and "weave". Check your GPU control/config software. For example, my AMD HD 4670 has (from best/hardest to worst/easiest): [LIST] [*]weave [*]bob [*]adaptive [*]motion adaptive [*]vector adaptive [/LIST] That's hardware deinterlacing. If using LAV, you have the option to disable/enable hardware/GPU deinterlacing (I suggest you try both options). When enabled, you probably have to disable high quality to keep the load as low as possible. You also have the software YADIF option. It's nice but very processor intensive, so I advise to avoid it. I don't know if the "deinterlacing mode" setting is hardware or software (I suspect software), but try "disabled (progressive)". As above: in LAV it is called "software deinterlacing" (compared with "hardware/GPU deinterlacing"). Names/terminology varies from codec to codec. [edit: Forgot to say, make sure you try to turn off post processing (AA, filtering, dynamic contrast etc.) features in the GPU config software... and try different V-sync options. Of course, some settings (eg. disabling v-sync) may give sub-optimal results. You have to decide how much video quality you're willing to sacrifice to have this low power system.] [/QUOTE]
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