Recommended Posts

How are they trolling? The blog post does not specifically mention theora acceleration (or anything about video acceleration really) When they say "fully hardware accelerated", they are referring to that the UI of the browser should be accelerated as well, not just the web pages like other browsers do.

Trolling is claiming untrue things. For example, for Firefox, claiming full hardware acceleration without support of h264 / AVC, or claiming high performance while still greatly being outdone by competitors.

Yes, that is why my previous post specifically states why that is very very unlikely that someone would add hardware acceleration to WebM/Theora/RealVideo/Whatever.

AFAIK, UI acceleration is being done by Firefox without much success since version 4. IE10 has hardware acceleration done properly via Metro... eh,

I'm still not sure what Opera means by saying they want to be the first to be fully hardware accelerated

I believe they want to be the first cross platform browser that properly hardware accelerates on all platforms, unlike Firefox (which doesn't even bother outside of Windows), Chrome (not sure, but I don't think it has proper acceleration outside of Windows, and still isn't even fully accelerated on Windows anyway) & Safari.They've already hardware accelerated all over on mobile, and they're doing a good job getting the desktop there.

Though it's a testament to how hard a task it is trying to accelerate this kind of program with OpenGL is (needed for OSX & Linux accleration), when their single DirectX build is faster and more stable than all their previous OpenGL only accelerated builds they've been testing for months :p

The only platform Firefox doesn't accelerate the full UI on, is Linux (due to them using X11 surfaces and trying to get those to play nicely with OpenGL), that's being fixed though (Although as a result, it might be slower on some cards :laugh:)

Aye, but on Mac, Firefox doesn't fully hardware accelerate the draw operations.

Did find this quote from Opera though which probably explains their stance: http://my.opera.com/core/blog/2011/02/28/webgl-and-hardware-acceleration-2

Our hardware acceleration is a bit different from what other browsers have implemented. Most of them do full hardware acceleration of all draw operations, but only on Windows Vista and Windows 7 - dropping to a more limited set of accelerated draw operations on other platforms. Our implementation will feature full acceleration on any OS with sufficient hardware support. This means we can also use fully hardware accelerated draw operations on Windows XP, Linux, Mac OS X and OpenGL ES 2 capable devices such as recent smart-phones and web-enabled TVs.

Aye, but on Mac, Firefox doesn't fully hardware accelerate the draw operations.

Did find this quote from Opera though which probably explains their stance: http://my.opera.com/...-acceleration-2

Ahh, that explains things a bit better. They're writing their own 2D drawing API like Direct2D, but one that uses OpenGL underneath. I know Mozilla have similar plans, but that's a long way off (although some of their current drawing work is a precursor)

It'll be interesting to see what Opera can achieve, performance and capability wise (e.g. Direct2D is missing a few things you need for 100% GPU accelerated <canvas>, IE9 simply ignored those bits while Mozilla implemented them via OpenGL/Direct3D blending)

Sometimes setting opera to mask itself as firefox helps with these issues :)

thank you does the work! (used Spoof UserAgent and set it to 2) :)

Now umm i have fixed the height of draggable content to max so that aero snap doesn't work when maximized. But now if i double click to are at right of tabs , it wont resize but open new tab , anyway to disable this ?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • We had no idea as kids how much time and energy it took to be an adult 😅
    • The Trump administration doesn't want you to use OpenAI's GPT-5.6 without its approval by David Uzondu Image via @realDonalTrump (X) As OpenAI prepares the release of its next model, GPT 5.6, the White House has instructed the company to limit the distribution of the software to a small group of government-approved partners instead of the general public, as it has done with previous releases. According to The Information, OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman sent an internal memo to staff on Thursday explaining that the federal government will approve access "customer by customer" during an initial preview phase. Altman noted in the communication that this restrictive rollout is "not [their] long-term model" for software deployment, and the company plans to work toward a "more sustainable" distribution method later. CNN said that both OpenAI and the Trump administration view the capabilities of GPT 5.6 on the same level as Anthropic's Mythos and that government officials intend to "collaborate with frontier AI labs to develop shared approaches for addressing the challenges of scaling this technology." The latest restriction comes just weeks after the US Commerce Department decided to restrict Fable, a version of Mythos with extra safety "guardrails" to prevent users from exploiting software vulnerabilities. Not long after the release, though, researchers at Amazon found a way to bypass these restrictions, prompting an aggressive response from federal authorities. The government ordered Anthropic to cut off access for non-US citizens located outside the US, non-US citizens living inside the US, and incredibly, even Anthropic's own foreign-born employees. Anthropic now appears to be building a workaround to resolve this compliance block with an update to its Privacy Policy that introduces a category called "Verification Data" to handle KYC and Digital IDs. This setup could mandate digital identity checks to filter users by nationality, requiring a government-issued ID and facial biometric data. Who knows? Maybe in the future, you would have to scan your US Passport or State ID to prove your citizenship before you are allowed to chat with Fable 5 (or any other model).
    • When Windows 7 was released I created an AutoHotkey script that uses Alt+` as a keyboard shortcut to move a window across monitors. I have been using that script for over 15 years and this is the first time I have come across another app that uses the same shortcut!
    • I called it last year that they wouldn't end support when they said there would. There are too many people still on Windows 10 waiting for something better to upgrade to and 11 ain't it! The recent promises of fixing Windows 11's many problems is nice, but unless they deliver on those promises in a big way then I expect customers will still want to stick with 10.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Enthusiast
      Xonos went up a rank
      Enthusiast
    • Conversation Starter
      Admir earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      The_Focal_Point earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      411
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      169
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      129
    4. 4
      neufuse
      69
    5. 5
      Xenon
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!