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Posted (edited)

Is it in the plans?

 

IE interpolate 30P into 60P.

 

(I know some people out there like lower fps for various reasons and I've read up on them.  For me, the higher the better, but 60P is my TV.)

Edited by macv
Guest asrequested
Posted

Whatever player you use will be responsible for that. Or are you wanting the server to transcode to 60fps.

Posted

Server.  I think I got SVP to work with VLC but would be nice if Emby can do it.

Posted

What do you mean server? What Emby app are you using?

Posted

I mean Emby.  Using the Win 10 app + Roku TV Emby app.

Posted

If the video player in the app, such as Roku TV does not provide this to you natively, then what benefit would there be to do this with transcoding on the server?

Posted (edited)

I don't know, I just want interpolation to 60P.  If it's out of scope of Emby, then it's out of scope.

Edited by macv
Posted

I don't know, I just want interpolation to 60P.  If it's out of scope of Emby, then it's out of scope.

 

In the case of the Roku app it really has nothing to do with Emby but everything to do with what Roku supports.

 

On the other hand, if you're using an HTPC app such as Emby Theater, then that is a different story.

Guest asrequested
Posted

If you're using the Windows desktop app, which uses mpv, you can incorporate SVP into that. They have a guide for it. Another user is doing it. There's a bit configuring you need to do to make it work. And you may not be able to use hardware acceleration, but I'm pretty sure I can get that to work for you.

daedalus
Posted

mpv also has an inbuilt interpolation feature, that also works with HWA

Posted

In the case of the Roku app it really has nothing to do with Emby but everything to do with what Roku supports.

Well the the TV is a Roku TV, and it supports 4K 60hz.

 

@ will look into SVP with mpv, thx.

Posted

Well the the TV is a Roku TV, and it supports 4K 60hz.

 

So, doesn't the TV do this already for you?

Posted

So, doesn't the TV do this already for you?

I'm not aware of any display that has built-in frame interpolation, are you?

crusher11
Posted

Uh....almost all of them?

 

Which also ignores the question of why you'd even want to do this.

Guest asrequested
Posted (edited)

He's talking about motion smoothing. Not a lot of TVs have this anymore. My old TV has it, but my new TV doesn't. It's a specific algorithm. SVP does this. It's more than just interpolation. There's a lot of confusion around what interpolation actually is. He's not talking about simple 3:2 pulldown.

Edited by Doofus
Posted

Sounds like I need to get an old TV? ha.

I wonder why they got rid of it.

Guest asrequested
Posted

Sounds like I need to get an old TV? ha.

I wonder why they got rid of it.

Probably not very popular. Like 3D stuff. Pretty much gone.

Posted

Ah too bad.  After seeing native 60P video, anything less looks very flicker-y, especially panning shots.

Guest asrequested
Posted

You may want to try mpv's interpolation, first. It may give you enough of what you want. There's an option to enable it in the settings, but what it doesn't tell you is that you also need to enable display sync. If you are bitstreaming your audio, enable the frame drop option.

Posted (edited)

Thx, will give that a shot after recovering from burnout after getting SVP to work with VLC; that was a bit of a convoluted process too.

Would pay for an easy stream to TV solution ;-)

Edited by macv
Guest asrequested
Posted

I think you might like the interpolation. It definitely smooths the motion, not quite to the degree that SVP does, but it's much easier to use :)

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