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Intel announces 7th Gen Kaby Lake CPUs with 10 Bit Hardware Decode and Encode


LimitBreak
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10 Bit HEVC 4K Encode and Decode provides 4K editing and watching capabilities to the masses. Also will support VP9 10 bit hardware decode and 8 bit VP9 hardware Encode for Youtube consumption. 

If you have the Samsung NX1 or NX500 and want to edit on the go, this might be useful for you. 

Source:  http://www.anandtech.com/show/10610/intel-announces-7th-gen-kaby-lake-14nm-plus-six-notebook-skus-desktop-coming-in-january/3

"There's also HDR and wide color gamut support, but Intel says it's up to manufacturers to implement the two competing HDR standards, Dolby Vision and HDR10. On top of just letting you watch more 4K video, the new chips' encoding performance could be a huge deal for anyone editing media, with speeds between 1X and 3X real-time for 30FPS 4K. Source: https://www.engadget.com/2016/08/30/intel-7th-generation-core-cpus/"

 

 

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1 hour ago, LimitBreak said:

10 Bit HEVC 4K Encode and Decode provides 4K editing and watching capabilities to the masses. Also will support VP9 10 bit hardware decode and 8 bit VP9 hardware Encode for Youtube consumption. 

If you have the Samsung NX1 or NX500 and want to edit on the go, this might be useful for you. 

Source:  http://www.anandtech.com/show/10610/intel-announces-7th-gen-kaby-lake-14nm-plus-six-notebook-skus-desktop-coming-in-january/3

"There's also HDR and wide color gamut support, but Intel says it's up to manufacturers to implement the two competing HDR standards, Dolby Vision and HDR10. On top of just letting you watch more 4K video, the new chips' encoding performance could be a huge deal for anyone editing media, with speeds between 1X and 3X real-time for 30FPS 4K. Source: https://www.engadget.com/2016/08/30/intel-7th-generation-core-cpus/"

 

 

Samsung was ahead of it's time with the NX1... Too bad they got out of the DSLR business. They showed real promise. 

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5 minutes ago, Luke Mason said:

HEVC/H.265 was not suitable for and was not designed as an acquisition format, it's too computationally intensive for both encoding and decoding.

I see where you're coming from but...

That is the same as saying H.264 wasn't designed as an acquisition format, yet now it's the basis for Sony XAVC and Canon XF codecs.

As long as H.265 has the hardware encoder / decoder chips to support it there's no reason why it can't be an acquisition format and an edit-ready codec.

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42 minutes ago, Andrew Reid said:

I see where you're coming from but...

That is the same as saying H.264 wasn't designed as an acquisition format, yet now it's the basis for Sony XAVC and Canon XF codecs.

As long as H.265 has the hardware encoder / decoder chips to support it there's no reason why it can't be an acquisition format and an edit-ready codec.

You said it yourself, H264 is the basis of XAVC and XF-AVC, there were a lot of changes made to them and they are distinctively different from consumer H.264 designed for exhibition.

 

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