Any device with access to the iTunes Store, purchased within the last decade and a half should be able to play anything you purchase. Handbrake is for piracy thoughI own almost 200 iTunes movies, several TV shows etc. So what did you want to say?
Any device with access to the iTunes Store, purchased within the last decade and a half should be able to play anything you purchase. Handbrake is for piracy thoughI own almost 200 iTunes movies, several TV shows etc. So what did you want to say?
Why anyone would use h264 instead of h265 is beyond me, unless they use old obsolete tech but even intel atom processors from 8 years ago can decode it with less than 6 watts total system power consumptionIt's the most commonly used GUI frontend for x264. Apple has submitted patches to it (for x265, instead of submitting it upstream because Apple).
Because the world is full of devices without hardware h.265 decode.Why anyone would use h264 instead of h265 is beyond me, unless they use old obsolete tech but even intel atom processors from 8 years ago can decode it with less than 6 watts total system power consumption
Yet I should believe that Netflix wants to buy an iPad Pro to encode their shows to h264 xDBecause the world is full of devices without hardware h.265 decode.
Don't let the forum bubble fool you
Of course not, that's a completely different matter.Yet I should believe that Netflix wants to buy an iPad Pro to encode their shows to h264 xD
Ok, got now, you're the king.Any device with access to the iTunes Store, purchased within the last decade and a half should be able to play anything you purchase. Handbrake is for piracy though
But Windows on Arm gives me these options, iPad "Pro" doesn't.But these are not typical uses.
Ok, got now, you're the king.
I'm not sure what people expected gaming-wise from the Qualcomm Elite X when the Adreno GPU only delivers 4.6 TFlops.
Not only that, it's a totally new architecture for windows.I'm not sure what people expected gaming-wise from the Qualcomm Elite X when the Adreno GPU only delivers 4.6 TFlops.
Microsoft Surface Laptop's Snapdragon X Elite tears through the MacBook Pro in performance
Microsoft Surface Laptop's Snapdragon X Elite tears through the MacBook Pro in performance
Qualcomm is ready for a fight with its Snapdragon X Elite chipwww.laptopmag.com
The good
- Solidly built hardware with very good performance
- Nice keyboards, trackpads, and screens
- Windows on Arm compatibility and emulation speed has improved a lot over the last two years
- Many linchpin Windows apps, including Google Chrome, are already Arm-native; more are coming later
- Surprisingly decent game compatibility if your game isn't using anti-cheat software
- Fan noise is unobtrusive and relatively rare
- Solid battery life
The bad
- AI features are superfluous
- Some Surface Pro keyboard accessories are expensive
- Some upgrades (like the OLED screen for the Surface Pro) can only be bought if you pay for other unrelated processor and storage upgrades
- Grainy Surface Pro OLED screen
The ugly
- Some enduring compatibility problems that can only be solved by Arm-native versions of apps written for regular Intel and AMD PCs
How can they conclude that when the review only includes Geekbench, 3DMark Wild Life, GFXBench, and Handbrake?
- Windows on Arm compatibility and emulation speed has improved a lot over the last two years