<div dir="ltr"><br><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Jun 23, 2015 at 3:34 PM, Kirk Bocek <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:t004@kbocek.com" target="_blank">t004@kbocek.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
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<div>On 6/22/2015 4:06 PM, Nick Rout wrote:<br>
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<div>Playback is great and yes, you do need/want the
hardware acceleration if you playback HD mpeg2
content. If everything is mpeg 4, or only SD for
mpeg2 (dvd's) than you shouldn't need it. there
is also a license for VC-1 if you need that.</div>
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<div>Both together will cost you about $5 USD. A
small price for a huge performance jump. I was
able to play content un-accelerated, but it wasn't
smooth.</div>
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<div>However if you transcode all your HD content to
mpeg-4, or you use a device that records HD in
mpeg-4 you can probably pass on them and save
yourself $5.</div>
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<div>Note: I have no experience with the rPi... just
the rPi2. I suspect that the standard rPi may
struggle to decode even SD mpeg 2... but the rPi2
plays it just fine in software (no license).</div>
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<div>The raspberry pi and the raspberry pi2 have the same
GPU.</div>
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<div>The GPU decodes h.264 in hardware out of the box. It
will certainly do up to bluray bitrates. With latest kodi
test builds it will asl do MVC encoded 3D files in an mkv
container and 3D MVC in an ISO is being worked on. </div>
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<div>The GPU decodes mpeg2 and VC-1 in hardware IF activated
by purchasing a codec for a very small amount. It is
purchased online and you get a key for each codec, which
is unique to your pi/pi2.</div>
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<div>People have been using pi for SD xvid material for
ages, whether this is decoded in hardware, or is just so
light it is decoded by the pi CPU I am not sure.</div>
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<div>The pi2 has more ram and a quad core CPU. Because of
those improvements it will do much more than a pi like:</div>
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<div>1. Much faster through menus and rendering fanart, UI
etc</div>
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<div>2. Decode HD audio formats (DTS-HD/MA and Dolby TrueHD)
and pass them as PCM to your AVR/Receiver (up to a certain
bitrate). Pi does not have enough CPU for that.</div>
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<div>I believe in recent test builds there is also support
for HEVC decoding up to a certain point (720p I think).</div>
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<div>Overall you wouldn't buy a pi now when a pi2 is the
same price. If you have a pi and want to try it, then go
for it, but know that a pi2 will be much better.</div>
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I actually own both a 1 and a 2. The 1 is hard to find now. I tried,
gave up and bought a 2. I'm only using the 2 for Lakka right now
which really doesn't stress it at all.<br>
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But I started this thread after seeing the Kodi wiki page about
their MythTV plugin and wondering how capable it is. Sounds like a
possibility. But still a couple of questions. <br>
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You say the RPI/2 has the *power* to downsample DTS, etc. to
2-channel but does Kodi offer this capability they way MythFrontend
does?<br>
<br></div></blockquote><div><br></div><div>Yes.<br></div><div> </div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><div bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#000000">
And someone brought up the issue of playing generic media files.
Really important. I'm currently using mplayer externally through
mythfrontend. Does Kodi play media files over the network? <br>
<br></div></blockquote><div><br><br></div><div>Hell yes, it can connect to SMB, NFS, SFTP, FTP, uPnP, HTTP, WebDAV and probably more.<br></div></div></div></div>