![]() While Android 5.0 and iOS 11 natively support HEVC, your phone must be using a newer processor to playback those files smoothly. Media Playback with Supported Operating Systems, on Older Devices For manual offloads through the GoPro app or Quik Key, we block the transfer and display an error message.Īpplicable to devices running iOS 10.3.3 and earlierĪpplicable to devices running Android 4.4 (KitKat) and earlier If your device isn’t running Android 5.0 / iOS 11 or newer, you will not be able to play back HEVC files. ![]() Media Playback on Unsupported Operating Systems Otherwise, the GoPro app will prevent you from manually copying 4K 4:3 to your mobile device. In iOS, QuikStories will convert 4K 4:3 to a lower resolution for playback. In Android, the GoPro app will copy 4K 4:3 to your mobile device, but you won’t be able to playback those files. No version of Android or iOS supports 4K 4:3 playback. You will need to copy that media to your mobile device to view it. Media Playback on Camera via the GoPro AppĮven if your mobile device supports HEVC, you will not be able to play back HEVC footage on your SD card via the GoPro app. You can preview the scene beforehand, but as soon as you start recording, the live view becomes unavailable. Preview While Recording via the GoPro AppĮven if your mobile device supports HEVC, you will not be able to preview your footage while recording in the GoPro app. What are the limitations with HEVC on mobile? HEVC is supported on iOS 11 devices using the Apple® A10 processor and newer: Here are some of the leading Android phones supporting HEVC: HEVC is supported on Android 5.0+ devices using the Qualcomm® Snapdragon™ 820 series (or equivalent) processors and newer. Is My Mobile Device Compatible with HEVC? Android We display warnings on the GoPro app and the Quik for desktop app as well. When utilizing an HEVC video setting, a warning message will appear on the camera giving you a heads up that your phone or computer need to be HEVC compatible for playback and editing. GoPro uses HEVC for the following video modes: Video Resolution If you do not have an HEVC-compatible computer or smart device, all resolution/frame rate combinations not listed below use the familiar H.264 codec (as found on HERO5 and earlier cameras). Your HERO6 Black's HEVC modes can be found below. Moreover, HEVC is natively supported on Windows® 10 and MacOS® High Sierra on newer desktop computers with more powerful processors. Adoption for this new standard is increasing, and is natively supported on Android™ 5.0+ and iOS™ 11 on newer phones and tablets with more powerful processors. One solution would be using software like Handbrake to convert the video file from H.265 to H.264, but I consider that a "hack" as this really should work with my system spec.High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) – also known as H.265 – is a video compression standard that allows GoPro to capture large video content, such as 4Kp240, at roughly half the file size with equivalent image quality. Nvidia GeForce 1070 GTX (Driver version 398.82 which is the newest).Intel i7-8700K 3.7Ghz (8th gen, coffee lake, newer then Kaby Lake).GoPro Quik is now able to open and edit the video but it's stuttering, using 100% CPU on playback and hard to edit the movie Playback is not hardware accelerated and it uses near 100% CPU. Install "HEVC Video Extensions" from store (Regardless if K-Lite is installed or not): Windows Media Player plays video with both video and audio but it's stuttering.The playback is hardware accelerated as it only used 1% CPU. Installed K-Lite Codec Pack (w/HEVC codec): Windows Media Player plays the video with both video and audio smoothly.Uninstall all codecs, also the "HEVC Video Extensions" from Store: Windows Media Player plays only the sound, screen is black."HEVC Video Extensions from Device Manufacturer" (Free version that works with licence software like GoPro Quik): How can I get Windows Media Player and GoPro Quik to use Hardware Acceleration? ![]() When I use the app "Movies & TV" for playing the video file then it uses around 1% CPU and Hardware Acceleration seems to be enabled. I have installed the "HEVC Video Extensions" from Microsoft Store. The CPU usage is going through the roof and it's not using Hardware Acceleration. ![]() Playing HEVC H.265 videos using Windows Media Player and GoPro Quik then the 4k 60 fps video appears all stuttering and becomes a slideshow. Windows 10 getting HEVC H.265 Codec to use Hardware Acceleration ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |