Opera 104.0.4944.54 Stable update
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albano23 last edited by
@leocg this is what the first section says, I hope it is the one you are telling me about.
Graphics Feature Status
- Canvas: Hardware accelerated
- Canvas out-of-process rasterization: Disabled
- Direct Rendering Display Compositor: Disabled
- Compositing: Hardware accelerated
- Multiple Raster Threads: Enabled
- OpenGL: Enabled
- Rasterization: Hardware accelerated
- Raw Draw: Disabled
- Skia Graphite: Disabled
- Video Decode: Hardware accelerated
- Video Encode: Software only. Hardware acceleration disabled
- Vulkan: Disabled
- WebGL: Hardware accelerated
- WebGL2: Hardware accelerated
- WebGPU: Disabled
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albano23 last edited by
@leocg I do not know, the only thing I can tell you, is that they are 1080 videos or that you can put 1080, but I do not know if they use hardware acceleration, because as you can see, everything is normal in the data that I have sent you and I have been commenting. It is also true that I do not know where to look at the hardware acceleration in these videos.
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Wolfshards last edited by
Where the codec fixes for Opera on Linux? I got flatpak version and there still no fixes. Currently using Fedora at the moment and i cannot read streams or videos on most platforms. Most people think is the H264 issue.
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xb70 last edited by
105.0.4970.13 is now available for download and installation, FWIW, no thread about it yet.
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thelittlebrowserthatcould last edited by
@wolfshards: I also have Chromium and/or Vivaldi installed (Chromium for shopping using a cashback site, which needs to track visits, so I have no privacy protection installed).
The codec in Chromium is at /usr/lib/chromium/libffmpegDOTso
As Root create a subdirectory lib_extra at /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/opera/ and copy Chromium's libffmpegDOTso into it.
Re-start Opera and videos at Twitter etc should now work.
More details, with a link to downloadable versions of libffmpegDOTso available at:
https://gist.github.com/Thomas-Ln/c4ae803e90f9984b6612c8983c8fde1f
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