![]() For ffmpeg-based transcoders, there's a bug in ffmpeg and ProRes: it appears anything > 1080p gets marked as bt601 (instead of rec709) and the resulting incorrect transform(s) change the color and gamma. Do these various converters deal with color differently? The colors seem to get messed up to my eyes in Gamma DR. On just standard profiles, it looks great right out of the cam, but I haven't found a good flat setting yet. When you see problems happening on your 32bit PC, it's worth mentioning it as upstream as you can - it only helps preserve your 32bit PC a bit further before we eventually need to upgrade out of necessity.I'm really liking my NX1, but i don't really feel like I'm maximizing its potential, especially in terms of DR and color. I suspect there may be a fix in xball that could be carried across into xinv3d, but fixes take time to find and fix. Now we see similar problems with older 32bit computers vs newer 64bit PCs.įor example, the xinv3d mentioned might work fine on your/mine 32bit PCs, but like the 16bit timer overflow, also suffers a similar problem too. Old programs used a DOS timer for speed control, but those old 16bit timers were too small for everyone's faster 32bit computers. Today's latest computers leave older slower computer in the dust. Then there's also newer/nicer ways of doing things, which leaves older programs abandoned.įor example, right now I'm looking at two abandoned programs, and adding Desktop and some config lets them be visible by others outside of debian. You'd probably see it as when computers went from DOS with Windows3.1 went to Windows95. We went thought this sort of problem with 16bit going to 32bit. In 64bit, an int just keeps being positive for 63bits, so it's a positive value for a long way. This means, positive from zero up to 2GB minus 1 = 2147483648-1, then it flips to negative. In 32bit, you have a positive value for 31bits, then it becomes a negative value. I see a lot of programs that use "int" without any real regard for the 32bit vs 64bit behaviours. If you want my creds on that ive built over a 1000 PC s and have a background in electronics. Maybe as a result we can create another section in the forum upgrading your hardware, I know many on here could act as validators for people who are not sure what will work together.Īnd ill happily look at any ebay item for someone if they are not sure if its a good choice, or look at there existing PC via pictures/spec to see what it can upgrade with. ![]() I personalty fully support abandoning 32 bit. So while i dont want to make people who still have old HW feel unloved, I do want to help them to get something newer so that the burden of support on our dev/test team is reduced. Its probably true to say that ARM is now more powerful then a fast 32 bit processor. People, take a look on ebay, there are so many 64 bit motherboards out there with chips, and graphics cards, that will cost you next to nothing, that will upgrade your current internals of your PC, someone in your friends/family must be technical enough to do it, even my sister can do it, and shes had no technical training at all.Īnd then of course there's ARM. there's also a chance its too slow for a nice experience on linux. You will often see me adding a footnote to any linux discussion about slowness, not to think of modern linux versions as a way to rekindle use out of something that used to run windows XP, and wont work with windows 7. One of my neighbors does exactly that and i keep telling her to get a tablet. I had the same problem at work with people still needing 32 bit support, and so i ended that with not offering it on redhat 6 as none of our hardware is 32 bit.īut then i think about a few people who have old laptops that they still hang onto for sitting and browsing while watching TV. ![]()
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