I am wondering how good the Nook's video capability. It seems there is no powerful display adaper driver for it?
How about 720p video support?
Thanks
Rocklayer will play avi videos perfectly, there is however audio sync issues
Sent from my EvO using XDA App
The video part of the video plays fine. The audio part of the video does not.Uh if there's audio sync issues . . . how exactly is it playing videos "perfectly" ???
The video part of the video plays fine. The audio part of the video does not.
Nook Color's video player performance is underwhelming at the moment in regards to 720p playback. I'm no sure how the Archos 70 could play it just fine.
PowerVR's SGX series features pixel, vertex, and geometry shader hardware, supporting OpenGL 2.0 and DirectX 10.1 Shader Model 4.1.
The SGX GPU core is included in several popular systems-on-chips (SoC) used in many portable devices. Apple uses the A4 (manufactured by Samsung) in their iPhone 4, iPad, iPod touch, and Apple TV. Texas Instruments' OMAP 3 and 4 series SoC's are used in the Nokia N900, Sony Ericsson Vivaz, Motorola Droid/Milestone, Archos 70, and others. Samsung produces the Hummingbird SoC and use it in their Galaxy S, Galaxy Tab, Samsung Wave S8500 and Samsung Wave II S8530 devices.
Intel uses the SGX 535 as its GMA 500 and GMA 600 integrated graphics for their Atom platform.
Description
The TLV320DAC3100 is a low-power, highly integrated, high-performance stereo audio DAC with 24-bit stereo playback and digital audio processing blocks.
The device integrates headphone drivers and speaker drivers. The mono speaker driver can drive loads down to 4 . The TLV320DAC3100 has a suite of built-in processing blocks for digital audio processing. The digital audio data format is programmable to work with popular audio standard protocols (I2S, left/right-justified) in master, slave, DSP, and TDM modes. Bass boost, treble, or EQ can be supported by the programmable digital signal-processing block. An on-chip PLL provides the high-speed clock needed by the digital signal-processing block.
View full Description in Datasheet
Features
Stereo Audio DAC with 95-dB SNR
Supports 8-kHz to 192-kHz Sample Rates
Mono Class-D BTL Speaker Driver (2.5 W Into 4- or 1.6 W Into
Two Single-Ended Inputs With Mixing and Output Level Control
Stereo Headphone/Lineout and Mono Class-D Speaker Outputs Available
Microphone Bias
Headphone Detection
25 Built-in Digital Audio Processing Blocks (PRB_P1 – PRB_P25) Providing Biquad and FIR Filters, DRC, and 3-D Structures
Digital Mixing Capability
Pin Control or Register Control for Digital-Playback Volume-Control Settings
Digital Sine-Wave Generator for Beeps and Key Clicks (PRB_P25)
Programmable PLL for Flexible Clock Generation
I2S, Left-Justified, Right-Justified, DSP, and TDM Audio Interfaces
I2C Control With Register Auto-Increment
Full Power-Down Control
Power Supplies:
Analog: 2.7 V–3.6 V
Digital Core: 1.65 V–1.95 V
Digital I/O: 1.1 V–3.6 V
Class-D: 2.7 V–5.5 V (SPKVDD ≥ AVDD)
Would someone please post the link to setting up handbrake for the best results? Would be very much appreciated!
Sent from my rooted Nook Color
In handbrake, the iPod/iPhone profiles produce video files which work fine on the NC (up to 854x480). So if Baddaboom has profiles for those devices, give those a shot. If you want try to tweak the settings manually, the magic configuration in handbrake is:Are there manual settings that I can program into Baddaboom? I use that for video encoding as it supports CUDA on my graphics card reducing encode times up to 70% at times.
I am wondering how good the Nook's video capability. It seems there is no powerful display adaper driver for it?
How about 720p video support?
Thanks
In handbrake, the iPod/iPhone profiles produce video files which work fine on the NC (up to 854x480). So if Baddaboom has profiles for those devices, give those a shot. If you want try to tweak the settings manually, the magic configuration in handbrake is:Are there manual settings that I can program into Baddaboom? I use that for video encoding as it supports CUDA on my graphics card reducing encode times up to 70% at times.