Originally posted by Lightspeed
afraid to say, but that isn't quite correct. It highly depends on the quality you used when compressing the DivX. Good looking DivX videos did definately NOT work on my 533 MHz machine,
[/size]I used to watch DivX files with my 400 MHz K6/2 without problems when they first came around...
If you try to tell me I'd need a 1 GHz processor instead of my current Duron (somewhere near 800) to see the good looking files I currently watch (without any evidence of shortage of processing power) then I'll just have to laugh you out the window, sorry. :-)
Originally posted by Lightspeed
and i have seen them locking up on several 700 MHz machines as well. However, if you have a 1 GHz+ PC you should be able to watch most DivX without any problems. And if I mean good looking i refer as to not seeing any artifacts.
[/size]I can only speak from my experience, and based on that I'll have to assume there's something else wrong with your system and/or files; poor encodes, inefficiently configured system and so on
(I guess you use XP, hah). I used to routinely fix badly put together files with Virtualdub before they played nicely... there's lots of bad work out there.
Using an actual player like
Media Player Classic instead of bloated pieces of crap like the later versions of Windows Media Player
(6.4 rocks, and was my choice before finding MPC) or other similar horrors helps. Also use
ffdshow instead of the current dubious versions of DivX - the 5.x series even had a built-in
film grain adder, how ****ed up is that? I couldn't belive my eyes when I saw that, and stopped using such a idiotic product altogether. As if the picture quality could ever be good enough to
need ruining like that...
Anyway, back to topic: the MVEs are somewhat low resolution to begin with; if they're converted to some MPEG-4 format properly, no decent system that can play FS2 should have problems with them processing power-wise. (Although I suppose there are people with ~200 MHz machines out there... well, I just hope they won't mind.) There's always some even with better computers who will have problems, as always, but those won't have anything to do with needing a gazillion hertz CPU.