So I recently made a discovery that I honesty feel daft for not realizing before.

For anyone who recently moved to Linux or like me didn’t think about it there are separate video acceleration libraries for your GPU! Now most of you were probably completely aware of that. But I wasn’t so I’ve been mainly watching TV on my ThinkPad X230 for a couple of years at this point, and I always found video playback kinda lacking sometimes(stuttering, screen tearing, etc), but I always though that was due to the generally bad intel GPU drivers on Linux( there are libraries for AMD and Nvidia too). Until I came across this page on the Arch wiki( which except package names should apply to any other distro).

https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Hardware_video_acceleration

And I’ve since had much better video playback performance that no longer has stuttering and screen tearing!

So I hope this helps someone else at some point in time have a better experience on their Linux distro watching some TV or YouTube.

  • 13617@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    One of my biggest pet peeves with Linux by far. Usually my use of Linux is generally just parsec and that’s it. But I can’t ever select the right driver, and then I forget, idk it’s a whole thing and I just wish it was baked in and easy, but then again it is linux

    • LainOfTheWired@lemy.lolOP
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      1 year ago

      I don’t exactly know why, but part of it could be that due to different open source licences they have to keep things separate, because the kernel is licenced under the GPL, and the Intel video libraries probably aren’t.

      Another reason could be simply not wanting bloat, but with everything a standard kernel does come with I guess probably not