Quote from: George on November 09, 2023, 06:48:10Considering not to many years ago a mere 1GB was a HUGE amount of memory the reality is that there are very FEW applications and data sets that can use larger amounts of memory let alone REQUIRE IT to be productive.My very old MSI laptop is already 15+ years old, but even there it already had 4GB DDR2 out of the box (it simply doesn't support it anymore) and I didn't have enough of them in 2011 for my purposes.
Quote from: George on November 09, 2023, 06:48:10we are talking 8GB of memory!!
Considering not to many years ago a mere 1GB was a HUGE amount of memory the reality is that there are very FEW applications and data sets that can use larger amounts of memory let alone REQUIRE IT to be productive.
Quote from: George on November 09, 2023, 06:48:10Considering not to many years ago a mere 1GB was a HUGE amount of memory
Quote from: George on November 09, 2023, 06:48:10the reality is that there are very FEW applications and data sets that can use larger amounts of memory let alone REQUIRE IT to be productive.
Quote from: mirancar on November 09, 2023, 00:33:21windows out of the box does not support HEIC images.Except it does since they switched to a new Photos app a couple of months back.
Quote from: mirancar on November 09, 2023, 00:33:21you must install some windows store plugin.Yes that's true for the old Photos app, now called Photos Legacy.
Quote from: mirancar on November 09, 2023, 00:33:21many people dont care what that is and will just assume "doesn't work". And even then the experience is slow when having 1000 heic images in a folder instead of standard jpegs because there is no hardware decoding (on latest nvidia rtx 4000 gpu!). this scenario is very usual by just transfering phone photos.Never had an issue of it being slow with 108 MP HEIC/HEIF images taken with my gf's Galaxy Note20 Ultra, talking about hundreds of photos at once. Quick Sync doing its job just fine as its purpose is not just video but also image decoding; it converts the files to thumbnails and transcodes them when viewing them, all fast and snappy. Never tried with my 3060 though.
Quote from: mirancar on November 09, 2023, 00:33:21and please learn to read carefully. my first exact words are as follows: "for example my newer iphone goes much further real world usage of storage with 128gb than an older phone with the same 128gb. "I have to learn to read carefully while you read "Neenyah" as "an0n" (the other person who was replying to you)? Ok.
Quote from: mirancar on November 09, 2023, 00:33:21i dont care about your newer redmi phone, never even mentioned android,Yeah, but he did:
Quote from: an0n on November 08, 2023, 17:05:06Do you think PC doesn't use the same? H265 encoder also has long been introduced in android since early 2015, almost every single chip sold now has natively support both encoding and decoding it. H265 play or process in any kind memory, use the same amount of space. 200mb memory use to play or process h265 video is the same whether you do in android, mac, Linux, or Windows.
Quote from: mirancar on November 08, 2023, 17:29:16no, they do not use the same. yes for h265 but NO for HEIC images which is significant!
Quote from: mirancar on November 09, 2023, 00:33:21and please learn to read carefully
Quote from: Neenyah on November 08, 2023, 19:57:17windows out of the box does not support HEIC images. you must install some windows store plugin. many people dont care what that is and will just assume "doesn't work". And even then the experience is slow when having 1000 heic images in a folder instead of standard jpegs because there is no hardware decoding (on latest nvidia rtx 4000 gpu!). this scenario is very usual by just transfering phone photos.Quote from: mirancar on November 08, 2023, 17:29:16I have a cheap Redmi 10C phone with Android 13. Works great, I shoot photos in HEIC (with its stock camera) and videos in H.265 (also with its stock camera). No issues at all. Both HEIC and H.265 are fully supported in Windows so no idea what is the meaning of "actually it's really unbelievable at how poor the support on windows maschines is for such things.", lol.Quote from: an0n on November 08, 2023, 17:05:06Do you think PC doesn't use the same? H265 encoder also has long been introduced in android since early 2015, almost every single chip sold now has natively support both encoding and decoding it. H265 play or process in any kind memory, use the same amount of space. 200mb memory use to play or process h265 video is the same whether you do in android, mac, Linux, or Windows.
no, they do not use the same. yes for h265 but NO for HEIC images which is significant!
actually it's really unbelievable at how poor the support on windows maschines is for such things.
Quote from: NikoB on November 09, 2023, 00:11:47Yeah, I'm devastated. I'll have to take my old LG G2 out (from 2013) that's capable to do 60 Mbps 1080p 60 fps with 192 kbps audio and true 4K 30 fps ~40 Mbps with GCam. Its battery is crap now but if I have one big problem to share a random clips to my friends over IMs...Quote from: Neenyah on November 08, 2023, 19:57:17I have a cheap Redmi 10C phone with Android 13. Works great, I shoot photos in HEIC (with its stock camera) and videos in H.265 (also with its stock camera). No issues at all.You have one big problem - your video recording is technically and qualitatively outdated. My old smartphone from 2015 shoots 4k@30fps 48Mbps in H264/192kbps aac audio and I can bet that the video from my old smartphone is many times better in terms of sharpness than from your 2022. In addition, 4k gives you a free zoom x2 in fhd. =)
Quote from: Neenyah on November 08, 2023, 19:57:17I have a cheap Redmi 10C phone with Android 13. Works great, I shoot photos in HEIC (with its stock camera) and videos in H.265 (also with its stock camera). No issues at all.You have one big problem - your video recording is technically and qualitatively outdated. My old smartphone from 2015 shoots 4k@30fps 48Mbps in H264/192kbps aac audio and I can bet that the video from my old smartphone is many times better in terms of sharpness than from your 2022. In addition, 4k gives you a free zoom x2 in fhd. =)
Quote from: mirancar on November 08, 2023, 17:29:16I have a cheap Redmi 10C phone with Android 13. Works great, I shoot photos in HEIC (with its stock camera) and videos in H.265 (also with its stock camera). No issues at all. Both HEIC and H.265 are fully supported in Windows so no idea what is the meaning of "actually it's really unbelievable at how poor the support on windows maschines is for such things.", lol.Quote from: an0n on November 08, 2023, 17:05:06Do you think PC doesn't use the same? H265 encoder also has long been introduced in android since early 2015, almost every single chip sold now has natively support both encoding and decoding it. H265 play or process in any kind memory, use the same amount of space. 200mb memory use to play or process h265 video is the same whether you do in android, mac, Linux, or Windows.
no, they do not use the same. yes for h265 but NO for HEIC images which is significant!
actually it's really unbelievable at how poor the support on windows maschines is for such things.