Quote from: LL on September 05, 2022, 12:19:11"Radeon iGPU does support both native H265 and AV1 decoding."Again, I am talking about decoding in terms of video consumption (both local and streaming). Maybe you are thinking about production side? (I wouldn't know) which is completely irrelevant, as ultrabooks are not designed for that kind of work anyway.
It does not, it can't decode H.265 10bit chroma 4:2:2 neither Nvidias do, but Intel can . I have experience but if you doubt, go to Puget website and search for page with H.265 capabilities.
Several cameras and even smarthphones are outputting that chroma.
You want to deal with video editing you go Intel preferably 12th generation, but 11th also could do that.
Quote from: Dorby on September 04, 2022, 21:36:32- real HDR screenYou lie. Static HDR reqired maximum 0.005 nit black level and native (ansi) contrast from 100000:1. "OLED" screen in this laptop only 7000:1.
Quote from: LL on September 05, 2022, 05:52:11GPU that can handle 4K source video playback (12th Gen i7 Iris XE cannot do this)You are talking technical nonsense. Even i5 2018 shows smoothly 4k@60Hz in HDR mode without any problems with conversion via MADVR to Rec.709 from Rec.2020 on the fly.
Quote from: LL on September 05, 2022, 05:52:11- GPU that can handle 4K source video playback (12th Gen i7 Iris XE cannot do this)To be specific I am talking about real time tone-mapping of HDR10 source files. AMD 680M, Apple M2, and Nvidia GPUs can all do this while Intel Iris XE cannot. Also you are incorrect, Radeon iGPU does support both native H265 and AV1 decoding.
That is incorrect , it is the 12th Quicksink video that can handle all HEVC versions due to hardware decoding that the AMD do not have,
Quote from: RobertJasiek on September 03, 2022, 14:04:45Please explain how we can understand this from the benchmark data!See newest review Dell XPS 13 Plus 9320 (notebookcheck.net/All-three-Dell-XPS-13-Plus-9320-SKUs-in-review-Core-i5-1240P-i7-1260P-or-i7-1280P-OLED.644466.0.html)