Hardware-Based Video Acceleration Coming To Linux
sammydee writes "Phoronix reports that GPU based video decoding acceleration will be implemented in Gallium3d sometime this year. Drivers currently using Gallium3d include the open source nouveau driver for NVIDIA cards and experimental Intel GMA drivers. This is definitely good news for anybody who has ever tried to play high-definition 1080p content on any CPU older than about a year."
This is definitely good news for anybody who has ever tried to play high definition 1080p content on any CPU older than about a year.
Actually, one of the most preeminent examples of HW decoding of video nowadays is the Intel Atom processor, not really old processors.
Video accel. is inside the chipset for this one.
And yes, it is available in Linux, you will probably be able to watch h264 movies in your new EEEPC
how long until
Part of the problem with hardware accelerated video decoding on Linux is that because Windows uses the accelerated video decoding to play back DRM protected media, the hardware companies cannot reveal how the video decoding part works (since it would presumably allow someone to grab the unencrypted-but-compressed video for various DRM protected video files by writing a windows driver or something)