Thank You for your continued support and contributions!
The Onda does play many types of AVI containered videos in its original firmware, though.As to if it has a dedicated video decoder I can't say. I do know that it was marketed as a media player (implying video) not just a MP3 player.
I was thinking about what someone said in this thread: power requested for mpeg-4 decoding is too high for "our" audio players. I think Onda media player have hardware video decoders, so that they don't rely on the CPU for decoding. An mp3 player has to do all by software & CPU.
I was thinking about what someone said in this thread: power requested for mpeg-4 decoding is too high for "our" audio players.
Quote from: Datman on November 16, 2010, 06:45:55 PMI was thinking about what someone said in this thread: power requested for mpeg-4 decoding is too high for "our" audio players.Can anybody tell me, how mpeg-4 (SP particularly) can be more power demanding than mpeg-2?
Very few people actually *use* MPEG-4 SP, is probably the reason.
Adding it wouldn't solve the need to transcode everything, almost all MPEG-4 video out there is ASP.
And no, no version of MPEG is optimised in its specification for mobile CPUs.
MPEG-4 ASP implementations for ARM exist, sure, but they are more demanding than the majority of our players can support.
Is it actually more computationally complex? I was under the impression that they're not terribly different.
Im not insisting on anything. Just putting my 2 cents.
Page created in 0.063 seconds with 17 queries.