It's still a quality-at-a-given-bitrate deficient.
If you're doing temporary encoding for like, streaming, or something where real-time encoding performance matters it's still probably the way to go, but if you're wanting to create high-quality archival stuff it's still not quite as good as your other options.
Granted, x265 on the cpu is probably still the way to go (excepting maybe if you're doing AV1 on an ARC gpu), but nvenc and qsv still outclass AMF.
Wish AMD would get a little more serious and bring that up to par, but they seem to be waffling on what they even want to do for consumer gpus so I'm not really holding my breath here.
I mean, I'm not opposed to more users from larger platforms, but right now it's a shitty experience for Mastodon users trying to follow a Lemmy community, and it's a shitty experience for Lemmy users when a Mastodon user posts into a community too.
You need BOTH sides to make concessions and fixes and changes to make the experience not shit, and like, that will is just plain not there.
I also agree that the use cases of the platforms are wildly different and that leads to some added friction, but if the software actually interoperated well you could probably fix that with just polite social pressure.
But, well, neither side of this "interoperability" is... useful, and Mastodon doesn't seem interested to fix it.
I also think recruiting new users might be a more useful use of time than trying to just rely on poaching them from somewhere else, but uh, I couldn't tell you really how that should or could be done.
Assuming you mean commercial DVDs, handbrake+libdvdcss.
It's pretty much 'insert disk, hit button, wait some amount of time, video file!'
Would recommend, however, that you do not use AMF (AMD) for encoding, and just stick to QSV/NVENC/x264/x256 because AMD's quality is uh, less than stellar and you probably want the best possible quality for archiving your DVDs.
Eeh, I think you're rose-colored-glasses-ing the Steam/Steamdeck thing.
That's absolutely a near-monopoly using their near-monopoly money to make a platform, for a service, to sell you software.
Just because they're more friendly appearing, doesn't mean they're any less interested in lock-in and revenue generation from the lock-in on the hardware that's running their platform.
And just to veer this off before a WELL AKSHULLY shows up: you can run arbitrary software on the Steamdeck, yes. You can also do that on Apple hardware, or in Windows or whatever, and that doesn't invalidate their general business model of trying to be the trifecta.
Don't do that, please: there's less than no reason to make your entire password vault accessible on the public internet.
Vaultwarden is probably secure, and the vault data is probably encrypted in a way that's not vulnerable, but I mean, why add the attack surface?
Yeah yeah, exceptions, but if you legitimately have an exception you already know it and I'd bet that the vast majority of people don't, or would be much better served by a VPN tunnel than just rawdogging an argo tunnel.
I have a question, and I'm legitimately asking in good faith, because I am confused by this obsession about Mastodon compatibility.
Basically, why?
Mastodon doesn't give a shit about being a good citizen and very much has issues they've said they won't fix. And frankly, if Mastodon devs don't appear to care, why is everyone else so concerned about it?
Let them silo into their own little safe space, and maybe push people to use other platforms that ARE willing to be good Fedi-citizens.
(Also I hate how Masto-user posts show up with the @s and endless hashtags: they don't conform to how Lemmy posts look and work, and I'd legitimately consider just blocking all the Mastodon posters until they don't look and feel weird and out of place.)
Yeah I've heard the 'AMD drivers are better!' thing for Linux and have always been confused since I've had no issues with nVidia cards on Linux or Windows related to driver issues.
AMD stuff on the other hand, has been a mess non stop, except for my ROG Ally for some reason which is fine?
In short: computers suck and are unpredictable, or something.
A gun is stupid simple: it's a machined piece of pipe, something to strike the firing cap on the bullet, a trigger, and some sort of receiver.
Nothing you can't build out of parts from your local home supply store, if you really felt like it.
3d printing makes a couple of parts of building one easier, but it's certainly not required since we've had 3d printing for about 10 minutes, and been building guns for hundreds of years.
Maybe I've just gotten more price-sensitive on tech bits in the past few years, but those look shockingly misnamed. Should be "Core Expensive" instead of Core Ultra.
(I've certainly stopped caring about halo products and the good-enoughs are, well, good enough.)
Since either I missed it, or it wasn't made clear, and I'm not going to go sign up for anything to check - who is maintaining custody of the Bitcoin with this?
It sounds like it's web-based which makes me think Proton is, and not you, but again, maybe I missed something?
It's still a quality-at-a-given-bitrate deficient.
If you're doing temporary encoding for like, streaming, or something where real-time encoding performance matters it's still probably the way to go, but if you're wanting to create high-quality archival stuff it's still not quite as good as your other options.
Granted, x265 on the cpu is probably still the way to go (excepting maybe if you're doing AV1 on an ARC gpu), but nvenc and qsv still outclass AMF.
Wish AMD would get a little more serious and bring that up to par, but they seem to be waffling on what they even want to do for consumer gpus so I'm not really holding my breath here.