Discussion Forums > Technology
Playing videos on a DVD player using USB or SD
fohfoh:
550Hz... I don't think I had anything at that level since like windows 95//98. And even then I was close to at least 1Ghz.
SprkLft Drvr:
Freedom Kira:
Don't know how I'd get the case open without jiggling the display and last time I closed it I thought I'd lost the display for good. Oh yeah it's an HP. If I stop the fan there is no noise or vibration so I believe it's heat pipes bringing the heat to the heatsink, unless there's a fan that's supposed to circulate heat within the case and it died. The power supply definitely puts out too much heat.
I'm a savin', of course staying home with the internet and downloaded anime was part of my plan to avoid spending cash. While we're on the issue of eventually replacing my dinosaur, do I even have to worry about a modern laptop not being able to handle any video formats or resolutions? Don't want to spend too much but I don't want to make the mistake of being too cheap either.
tomoya-kun:
--- Quote from: SprkLft Drvr on September 22, 2010, 04:10:40 AM ---Freedom Kira:
Don't want to spend too much but I don't want to make the mistake of being too cheap either.
--- End quote ---
My HP netbook with a 9400m can play 720p MKV no problem.
Freedom Kira:
A netbook running an Atom N270 is probably able to play 720p no problem. 1080p is another story. Mine runs the N450 so it's got a bit more juice. Dunno about AMD's stuff; I don't really follow them.
This is assuming you're running Win7 Starter. Installing Linux would probably make it faster. Also assuming you're not using Windows Media Player. IMO ZoomPlayer is the best choice because it's lightweight, more so than MPCHC from my experience.
fohfoh:
Isn't the coreavc combo even less resource intensive than a codec(like CCCP or K-lite) combo?
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