If I recall correctly, the All-in-Wonder was a fairly weak video card - not near the speed and capability of the Rage Fury. Just because the All-in-Wonder has the ability to input/output video and act as a tv tuner doesn't mean it's very good or very fast. I have the ATI Rage Fury running on my windows 2K server right now while I type this message with a Quicktime window running trailers and it hasn't skipped a beat - video or audio. Craig > -----Original Message----- > From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us]On Behalf Of Mark > Myers > Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 4:40 PM > To: plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > Subject: Multimedia in Linux > > > I am curious, why is multimedia in preemptive multitasking OSes so bad? > I have noticed this both in Linux and Windows NT & 2000. > For example, playing a streaming video using RealPlayer. > On Linux, even using a 256Kbs stream, I get a tiny window with moderately > jerky video in Linux. > In Win2K, small video is smooth. Zooming by 2X in Win2K, video is very > jerky. Full screen mode is horrible. > The same video, on Win98SE, video is smooth at all zoom levels. > Same with playing back an .mpg movie. > On Linux, even with OSS sound drivers, the sound is good, but the video > (the scene from Titanic that sweeps from an oncoming shot with the girl > on the bow with her hands out, to the very stern of the ship moving away) > is jerky. > Same in Win2K. In Win98, video is smooth. > Is it because seeing the multimedia is processor intensive, a cooperative > multitasking environment is better than a preemptive one? > The machine running Win2K & Linux has an AMD K6-2 450MHz, 192MB RAM, ATI > All-In-Wonder Pro 8MB AGP, and a SoundBlaster AWE64 card. > The Win98 machine is AMD K6-2 300MHz, 128MB RAM, ATI Rage Fury 128 16MB > AGP (used to have the All-In-Wonder Pro when tests were run), Ensoniq PCI > audio card. > I have some home movies that I would like to edit using the computer so > that I can burn them onto CDROM and share them with family, but I am > afraid that I might be stuck using MS Me to do it. > Is there a way that I can boost multimedia performance in Linux? > Thanks! > Mark >