Wow a Jean-Baptiste that is respectable and isn't a fuzzy haired, nappy nigger diversity hire dyke. This gives some hope as a user of this program.
The quality went a tad downhill though
Take a 360p video or lower on linux for instance and play it, you'll get blocky/horizontal lines sometimes depending on the video format, that you won't get with "celluloid" for instance, unless you switch video output from "automatic" to "X11 video output (XCB)" or "XVideo output (XCB)" but then there's a perf hit. And no it has nothing to do with deinterlacing. I think that crap started to be a thing when wayland vs X became a thing
Compare https://pic8.co/sh/Eb2Qvv.pngVLC is on the right
Compare the top of the letters, bottom of the screen, compare the top of helmets, and look at the smoke; on the right you can clearly see horizontal lines within
Or seeking in video without it taking forever each time. I have to scrub with a different video player. On the other hand it's the player that handles almost everything.
Here the seeking is fine, maybe you have a mechanical HD?
I have an old ass Toshiba touch screen all in one on its last legs.
If I port over to a Linux flavor would I be able to use the touch screen or will it FUBAR?
I also use it as a DAW with MPC and FLstudio.
Would I be able to continue to use it for these purposes or is it best to keep with windows?
>I also use it as a DAW with MPC and FLstudio.
DAW https://forum.puppylinux.com/viewtopic.php?t=1471
MPC https://www.mpc-forums.com/viewtopic.php?f=45&t=213253
FLstudio https://forum.image-line.com/viewtopic.php?t=270394
Long story short keep windows
>If I port over to a Linux flavor would I be able to use the touch screen or will it FUBAR?
Test with a live usb first https://linuxmint.com/download.php
I use cinnamon personally, just because it looks better and my PC has no problem running it
How to make a live USB on windows https://youtu.be/RBC72byLDAA?t=20
You boot on that already and you test your touch screen, your sound and wifi (go on youtube typically) without installing anything. Then eventually if you actually successfully made the key, and booted on it, and tested all you need to check, then you can install linux side by side with windows, so you retain both aka "dual boot" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFJEBxg-o54, or you just override the whole drive to install linux and get rid of windows. Both cases there's graphical interface to do that from the live USB, point and click even grandma can handle it
Personally I would install linux side by side with windows for a start, so I still retain a windows just in case, then later you can do it all over again just for fun and get rid of windows
What's your toshiba model btw?
Lol
(post is archived)