2/29/2024 0 Comments Hevc codec windows 10 chip![]() I lost the ability to view Arlo as you did and had to download to view. With the new edge they no longer include that ability and for a year there has been 1000's of complaints not just for Arlo but even Netflix users and Microsoft said they were working on a work around. All I had to do to watch HEVC in the original edge was pay for the extension because Microsoft had to pay. Video chips have different abilities and that all affects the costs and what they can do also requires them to pay for doing so for some some things. ![]() Steve82759 Always the computer has had to have the hardware capability and not just for HEVC just ask a gamer. Another approach would be for Arlo to have an option to encode 2K and 4K as H.264 (since the camera hardware can do that) - but they would need to double the bitrate when that option is selected. The direct solution would be for Arlo to provide apps for Windows and macOS, so we wouldn't be forced to use the browser. ![]() The HEVC encoding is done in the camera hardware - and transcoding it to something else in the cloud will reduce the quality (which would be a really bad thing, since the bitrate is already marginal). However, this won't help us with Arlo videos. Hardware support is starting to show up - for instance, the current generation of Intel chipsets has hardware AV1 decode. AV1 is similar in performance to H.265 and is positioned as the successor to VP9. The H.265 (HEVC) licensing mess resulted in the formation of the Alliance for Open Media, which standardized AV1 a while back and is currently working on AV2. FWIW, H.266 (VVC) - the most recent H codec - has a similar licensing mess. Browsers are freeware, and deployed at huge scale - so the vendors are very sensitive to any royalties (esp if they are not capped). Low adoption in browsers is largely because of licensing costs (compounded by the various patent holders forming three different patent pools). As we've already discussed, this is on PCs that have HEVC support in their GPUs. It is outdated wrt Edge, as I am able to view 4K using Edge 91.0.864.67 (the current version). of edge with hardware acceleration is it, unless of course the list hasn't been updated. In our own tests of the extension, HEVC playback also worked on a Core i3-7100U in the NUC7I3BNK, as well as on a Celeron N3450.Will show what browsers work with HEVC which isn't many. However, if you perform a fresh install of Windows 10 Fall Creators Update 1709, you will need to download and install the HEVC Video Extension. This update integrates an HEVC codec into the system by means of the file fcumediaextensionupdate_圆4.cab, which makes it both unnecessary and impossible to install the HEVC Video Extension from the Store. On some systems, the HEVC decoder is actually already installed. HEVC videos can be decoded by the integrated graphics units on the Skylake (Core i-6000, 8 bit only), Kaby Lake (Core i-7000), Kaby Lake Refresh und Coffee Lake (Core i-8000) processors from Intel, as well as the GPUs on the AMD Radeon RX 400, Radeon RX 500 and Radeon RX Vega 56/64 graphics cards and the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1000 series graphics cards (Pascal) and the Nivida GeForce GTX 960 and GeForce GTX 950. This codec supports hardware-accelerated HEVC playback on the latest graphics units and graphics chips. If you are experiencing issues with HEVC, you can download and install the HEVC codec for free from the Microsoft Store. The reason for this is that Windows 10 does not include an HEVC decoder. On some Win 10 systems, HEVC video playback may stop working.
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