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Posts tagged ‘Windows’

11
Nov

10.6.5 brings ExFAT – makes sharing files between OSX and Windows easier!

EDIT on 02/16/2011 – It works again! 10.6.6. Seems the bug was ironed out on 10.6.6. Thanks all who reported it. I didn’t have the chance to test it out on a Win7 machine (as I was fresh out of one).

EDIT on 12/09/2010 – As Clinton pointed out in the comments below, a partition formatted in OSX as exFAT will in fact not work on Windows 7. You can however, format the partition in Windows 7 as exFAT to make it r/w on OSX. Sorry for this! I will update when I know more.

What a wonderful surprise last evening with the release of 10.6.5, especially for us dual-booters – support for ExFAT in OSX! Windows 7 and Vista SP1 have supported it for months, as did the 27″ iMac (mid 2010), but with 10.6.5, this has been released for all. The possibilities are just mind-boggling.

For the first time ever, native support for reading/writing files on a partition by both OSX and Windows! This has been a pipe dream, that has worked dodgily at best. One has had to resort to MacDrive on Windows to read/write OSX partitions, and poor OSX folk have had to wrestle with NTFS-3G drivers – don’t even get me started on how much I hate NTFS-3G. But with ExFAT, OSX and Windows 7 can work with the same partition with no extra software required. Wow. Just wow.

To get started, just format a partition on your drive, either on OSX or Windows 7 in ExFAT and watch the fireworks! Things like these bring out the geek in me. This alone is worth the update to 10.6.5. GO GET IT!



29
Jul

CoreAVC with Windows 7 RTM take 2

Windows 7 RTM has been leaked. That’s old information. Most of us have it running on our systems already, with a 30 day grace period (maybe more with a rearm). I too snapped up a copy of the RTM from the interwebs when it came out on July 14th. Since then I have updated my HTPC and the Windows Machine. With a slew of Matroska (MKV container) videos in my possession it is imperative to have flawless playback performance on my Windows HTPC, which admittedly is not the most powerful of machines.

I had blogged earlier about Media Player Classic – Home Cinema and DXVA, which granted, worked superb. However such is not the case for systems with older Graphics cards. CoreAVC is a shining beacon of hope for such machines.

As a test I tried out CoreAVC on my Windows 7 RTM (7600) machine. To get it to work was an exercise in madness, registry hacks and restarts. But I can proclaim that it indeed works, and I have full HD playback with my Media Player 12 and Media Center. I can use CUDA as well, though that’s kind of counter-productive and a matter of choice. If one can use CUDA, one is better off using MPC-HC with DXVA. But it is a matter of choice.

Here’s how I went about enabling CoreAVC – disable the Microsoft Decoder.

1. Open REGEDIT as an Administrator
2. Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\DirectShow\Preferred
3. Right click on ‘Preferred’ and select ‘Permissions’.
4. Click on ‘Advanced’ -> ‘Owner’ tab. ‘Administrators’ , check ‘Replace Owner on subcontainers and objects’ checkbox, OK.
5. Now back to the first window – click ‘Administrators’ and check ‘Full Control’. Press OK.
6. In the left pane look for {e06d8026-db46-11cf-b4d1-00805f6cbbea}
{31435641-0000-0010-8000-00AA00389B71}.
7. Edit these entries with a double click and replace the value data entry with that for CoreAVC – {09571A4B-F1FE-4C60-9760-DE6D310C7C31}.
8. Reboot. This is important.

And voila, the next time you play a MKV or H.264 video, CoreAVC will be the codec used. If in case it still doesn’t work for you, rename the following file to say whatsmynamem8.dll. Remember in order to rename this file you’ll have to take ownership of this particular folder. As with everything else in life, do it with caution.

c:\windows\syswow64\msmpeg2vdec.dll


14
Jul

Windows 7 Build 7600 – RTM?

Leaked on the Interwebz last evening, build 7600 x64 is being touted as the Window 7 RTM (Release To Manufacturing and not Read The Man). I was of course eager to try this build out, and a couple of minutes later I took it for a test run on my Windows PC. The verdict is – “hmm”. In part due to the fact that it seems like an unfinished product. For instance, it did not mount one of my partitions after installation completed, which led me to a very panicky check of my partitions and mount status. Furthermore, Aero seems a bit sluggish.

On the other hand, none of the RC/Beta keys work anymore and no more does one see the “For Evaluation” text emblazoned on the lower-right corner. I will post screenshots later this evening.


4
Jun

DXVA, CoreAVC – x.264 & MKV playback in Windows 7 RC

With the advent of the latest and greatest of Microsoft’s OSs – Windows 7 – come a slew of issues with the reliable playback of HD videos that we have lying around in our collections. According to specs, Windows 7 RC1 shipped with an x.264 decoder built in. However this is far from a panacea for those of us with older hardware.

I use a custom HTPC for all my playback needs with my Full HD (1080p) LCD TV. The HTPC rig, built back in 2007, does not have the latest and greatest processor, but runs Windows 7 RC1 with aplomb. I did upgrade the graphics card recently to an OC’d NVIDIA 9800GT.

With Windows Media Player 12, I have had no issues whatsoever with 720p playback. Though the Activity Monitor (or its Windows equivalent) showed a spike in CPU usage while playback, it was low enough to be ignored. However when I threw a 1080p video at the system, it would choke. I briefly considered upgrading the CPU, but thankfully decided to do some digging around.

I narrowed the culprit down to the laggy x.264 decoder included with Windows 7. The answer was simple. Update to ffdshow or CoreAVC. I chose the latter after reading that CoreAVC is better in terms of CPU usage. However, on installing the latest version (1.9.5), I for the life of me, could not get CoreAVC to load with Windows Media Player 12. Forums advised registry hacks and key deletion that seemed to work for some, but not for yours truly. I had to find another solution.

A bit of digging later, I found the superb world of DXVA! DXVA or DirectX Video Acceleration uses the hardware of the graphics card for video acceleration. It is featured natively in Media Player Classic – Home Cinema. It requires a powerful Graphics card which I am happy to say I own – the NVIDIA 9800GT. To enable DXVA in Vista or Windows 7, just select EVR Custom mode in MPC-HC options. The result? CPU usage has dipped to 3-4% for 1080p videos, compared to nearly 60-70% usage previously. I am so impressed and hooked.


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