OK, so since Dolphin 2.0 RC1 supports Brawl, I want to use my Wii save and record my replays in HD. However, I've gone through all the config windows, and I don't see an HD option! I have an HD monitor, and I NEED HD REPLAYS! HALP!!!
bdr9 said:Why are you using uncompressed frames? Even a short video will result in a gigantic file and will be hard to play on even a good computer.
Dter ic said:
they don't use dolphin, i think, they use a regular wii a video rgb to usb which connects to the pc and then thety get the screencasting software and recored whatever is onscreen whiler they demo on the wii
Measuring processors by just GHZ is like measuring cars by just RPM. Don't mean shit.Fishaman P said:P.S. Is it normal for Brawl to run faster than Melee? When recording, Melee is about 40% speed, but Brawl is like 90% speed. I only have 2.4GHz for crying out loud!
Older Processors.Fishaman P said:I don't see why it matters
Hard to compare those 2. Pentium 4 is a single core CPU so it has 2.26GHz in one core. A Core 2 Duo is, of course, dual core so it has two 2GHz cores giving it a total of 4GHz. Not the same speed. That said its not simply double and many more programs are dual core optimised now so they run significantly better on dual cores.Rydian said:Older Processors.Fishaman P said:I don't see why it matters
The "Intel Pentium 4" 2.26ghz processor scores 288.
Newer Processors.
The "Intel Core 2 Duo P7350" 2.00ghz processor scores 1,318.
You cannot compare just by ghz. The model makes a huge difference nowadays.
1,318 is not what you get when you double 288. Nor when you triple. Not even quadruple.Jamstruth said:Hard to compare those 2. Pentium 4 is a single core CPU so it has 2.26GHz in one core. A Core 2 Duo is, of course, dual core so it has two 2GHz cores giving it a total of 4GHz. Not the same speed. That said its not simply double and many more programs are dual core optimised now so they run significantly better on dual cores.
It wasn't the most clear but it was there. Having two 2GHz CPUs does give you roughly 4GHz of processing power at your fingertips. Most games etc. are now dual core optimised and take advantage of this. Any other program simply has the load shared between the 2 cores equally (To my understanding anyway) meaning you have roughly the 4GHz at your disposal this is less efficient though.Jamstruth said:Hard to compare those 2. Pentium 4 is a single core CPU so it has 2.26GHz in one core. A Core 2 Duo is, of course, dual core so it has two 2GHz cores giving it a total of 4GHz. Not the same speed. That said its not simply double and many more programs are dual core optimised now so they run significantly better on dual cores.
That part isn't correct. If a program is not spawning multiple threads then it can only run on one core. The program has to be modified from the ground up to use multiple cores, since it needs to run in multiple threads and keep proper timing and communication between them. If it's not a task that can benefit from multiple cores (such as a web browser or video/music player) then there's nothing more cores can do and it will only run on one core.Jamstruth said:Any other program simply has the load shared between the 2 cores equally (To my understanding anyway) meaning you have roughly the 4GHz at your disposal this is less efficient though.
My understanding may not be right though so feel free to correct me further.