Which OS for best DivX performance? [amp music] [best divx]

Q: Ok guys, heres my setup: AMD K6-2 500Mhz, 512MB SDRAM, 3GB HD, Toshiba 40x SCSI, Matrox G450 16MB Dual Display. Now I have WindowsXP Pro, but there is a LOT! Most of my DVD-Rips play very choppy. So I was plannin on doing a re-re u0026 u0026 was thinking what would be best used OS: Win98, WinME, Win2000 or WinXP Pro? I do not care about anything else to play Movie Music u0026. Lemme know.

thanks

also, a video card with TV-out straight instead of the Matrox DualHead works better for outputtin on a TV?


Re:Try BSPlayer (http://arstechnica.infopop.net/OpenTopic/page?a=tpc&s=50009562&f=67909965&m=2140968593)–it generally uses fewer CPU cycles than other decoders. Also, open a DivX file in Windows Media Player, stop the file, go to File>Properties>Advanced>DivX Decoder Filter and set the Quality level to Minimum. That should net you a nice CPU utilization drop.

Re:so…Win98SE…any other suggestions? is that a good idea?

Re:I would drop back to Win98 SE and use TweakUI to optomize everything, get it nice and fast.

But your CPU is kinda gettin old too…


Re:Might want to drop back to Windows 2000, as WinXP may be rather slow on only a K6-2 500MHz… though you do have plenty of RAM for it.

Re:Also, I forgot to mention… since you are using a Matrox G450 card, your DivX files must have a horizontal resolution that is evenly divisible by 32. If they aren't, the video overlay support of your card will not be used, resulting in choppy play.

There is a utility called DivXG400 that will add black pixels to the file on playback, allowing the G400/450/550 cards to use video overlay when the DivX file's horizontal resolution is not evenly divisible by 32. You can get it here (http://www.tac.ee/~prr/videoutils/).


Re:I don't think that the operating system is the problem as much as it is your processor. I have a dedicated machine hooked to my TV to view DivX files (K6-2 450+, 128 Mb RAM, Radeon 32 Mb SDR PCI, 36x CD ROM, Win98SE), and it plays DivX files fine as long as the vertical resolution of the DivX file is equal to 288 or less. For instance, a DivX file with a resolution of 640×272 (as close to 2.35:1 as I could get) plays fine. However, if the vertical resolution of the DivX file is over 288, the movie plays back really chopping (with constant pausing).

Related posts

Leave a comment

0 Comments.

Leave a Reply


click to changeSecurity Code

[ Ctrl + Enter ]