Oh, thanks.
I guess I thought VP09 *equals* H.265, but not really sure where I picked that up from.
Due to server slowness, downtime, and other issues, Eclipse will be moving to a more stable and efficient platform that should result in much better stability. There is no timeline for this yet, just want you to know what's happening with all the downtime and I have a plan to fix it.
New codecs
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The-10-Pen
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The-10-Pen
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New codecs
I guess in thinking through my video-ing history, I have been through this high CPU issue once in the past.
That is *why* I force h.264 on YouTube. That history, in hindsight, was probably why I thought VP9 was a subset of h.265.
That is *why* I force h.264 on YouTube. That history, in hindsight, was probably why I thought VP9 was a subset of h.265.
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The-10-Pen
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New codecs
Eureka!
I probably should have thought of this sooner.
I switched over to now intentionally "throttling" my network for DirecTV only.
This is forcing (and just guessing here for sake of conveying) a 1080p stream instead of a 4k stream.
If I set the throttle too low, it CLEARLY drops to 480p (again, just a number for sake of conveying).
I couldn't find a throttle setting for 720p. Anyone that streams will know the difference between 480 and 1080.
But the difference between 1080 and 4k (on a medium-sized monitor) is BARELY NOTICEABLE.
Plus, it is physically IMPOSSIBLE to take a "VCR Quality Source" and 'upcode it' to be "DVD Quality".
And I think this is what DirecTV is doing, just sending EVERYTHING as "4k" *IF* the customer has the bandwidth.
And this throttling introduces ZERO buffering lags !
And most importantly, CPU and GPU both stay BELOW 25% !!!
I probably should have thought of this sooner.
I switched over to now intentionally "throttling" my network for DirecTV only.
This is forcing (and just guessing here for sake of conveying) a 1080p stream instead of a 4k stream.
If I set the throttle too low, it CLEARLY drops to 480p (again, just a number for sake of conveying).
I couldn't find a throttle setting for 720p. Anyone that streams will know the difference between 480 and 1080.
But the difference between 1080 and 4k (on a medium-sized monitor) is BARELY NOTICEABLE.
Plus, it is physically IMPOSSIBLE to take a "VCR Quality Source" and 'upcode it' to be "DVD Quality".
And I think this is what DirecTV is doing, just sending EVERYTHING as "4k" *IF* the customer has the bandwidth.
And this throttling introduces ZERO buffering lags !
And most importantly, CPU and GPU both stay BELOW 25% !!!
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New codecs
The-10-Pen wrote: ↑05 Feb 2026, 14:08 Eureka!
I switched over to now intentionally "throttling" my network for DirecTV only.
This is forcing (and just guessing here for sake of conveying) a 1080p stream instead of a 4k stream.
If I set the throttle too low, it CLEARLY drops to 480p (again, just a number for sake of conveying).
But the difference between 1080 and 4k (on a medium-sized monitor) is BARELY NOTICEABLE.
And I think this is what DirecTV is doing, just sending EVERYTHING as "4k" *IF* the customer has the bandwidth.
And most importantly, CPU and GPU both stay BELOW 25% !!!
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