2009-12-21, 08:29 PM
This problem began when I was trying to solve the problem described on this thread: http://forums.nextpvr.com/showthread.php...post360572
When I was first dealing with the topic of the thread (the intermittent motion blur) I didn't realise that it was a deinterlacing problem. I assumed that I was overloading my CPU. To deal with this, I installed AVIVO codecs, which claim to utilise the GPU on the video card, instead.
Now, I can record as much video as I want with no problem; even four sources at once (2 hi-def, one SD and another from the net). However, as soon as I WATCH video while even one source is recording, the recording turns to jelly (metaphorically speaking of course; if it were literal, I would at least have jelly to console me). It is worse when I watch HD than when I watch SD, and it is fine when I watch a simple low-res MPEG1 file (340x288). This seems to indicate that I am overloading the GPU, which is now trying to do the additional work of transcoding my recordings.
I never had this problem before, so it must be based on something I have installed. I have been focussed on the fact that I installed Catalyst 8.11, but pBS and other experienced members tell me that is the best choice for my x1250 adapter (and, indeed, the imaging did improve when I wasn't recording). So, the other two things I installed was ffdshow and those Avivo codecs.
The only flaw to my theory is that UNinstalling both codec packs has NOT fixed the problem. However, when I installed the codecs, I was able to view MOV and WMV for the first time. Surprisingly, now that I have uninstalled them, I can still watch MOV and WMV. Are shards of them hanging around? Would using the "remove everything ATI" utility get rid of them?
I am convinced this is not based on general system speed or stability. My drives are in IDE mode, but both using Ultra DMA 5 or 6. The CPU is not spiking significantly during these activities.
When I was first dealing with the topic of the thread (the intermittent motion blur) I didn't realise that it was a deinterlacing problem. I assumed that I was overloading my CPU. To deal with this, I installed AVIVO codecs, which claim to utilise the GPU on the video card, instead.
Now, I can record as much video as I want with no problem; even four sources at once (2 hi-def, one SD and another from the net). However, as soon as I WATCH video while even one source is recording, the recording turns to jelly (metaphorically speaking of course; if it were literal, I would at least have jelly to console me). It is worse when I watch HD than when I watch SD, and it is fine when I watch a simple low-res MPEG1 file (340x288). This seems to indicate that I am overloading the GPU, which is now trying to do the additional work of transcoding my recordings.
I never had this problem before, so it must be based on something I have installed. I have been focussed on the fact that I installed Catalyst 8.11, but pBS and other experienced members tell me that is the best choice for my x1250 adapter (and, indeed, the imaging did improve when I wasn't recording). So, the other two things I installed was ffdshow and those Avivo codecs.
The only flaw to my theory is that UNinstalling both codec packs has NOT fixed the problem. However, when I installed the codecs, I was able to view MOV and WMV for the first time. Surprisingly, now that I have uninstalled them, I can still watch MOV and WMV. Are shards of them hanging around? Would using the "remove everything ATI" utility get rid of them?
I am convinced this is not based on general system speed or stability. My drives are in IDE mode, but both using Ultra DMA 5 or 6. The CPU is not spiking significantly during these activities.