(2014-07-23, 21:28)Smobbo Wrote: Tnx for the update!
I was still on 2.10, so I thought the sleep/wake via USB (ir remote, harmony) was a good reason to update.
The instructions were clear, updated the coreboot firmware. Now says it the version of 20140709, is this correct?
It didn't update openelec, this probably only works on a new install right? So updated manually (which currently on openelec means dumping 1 .tar file in a folder and rebooting )
Sleep/wake works and is really instant! Might save a few cents on the yearly energy bill
yes, 20140709 is the latest coreboot update. I guess I could have updated the datestamps, but was lazy.
the script should not be used to update openelec; either enable automatic updates, or do a manual update to the latest official OE build
(2014-07-23, 21:42)MrCrispy Wrote: This may not be the place to ask but I'm going to since its a very active thread - does 3D work reliably in OE running on this? I have a few 3d mkv's that I renamed to .hsbs, that is all that's needed right? I also have iso's ripped from my discs that are MVC encoded, from what I read I didn't see a way to play them back. Thanks.
SBS stuff should play fine, but MVC isn't currently supported by XBMC, IIRC.
(2014-07-23, 21:54)wally_666 Wrote: Matt, thanks for the script and clear instructions, its working very well, but how do I find out about any updates to your custom build?
Automatic updates are turned off per your default, I receive crawler messages about XBMC updates, but since I had to buy a USB keyboard to get into developer mode I suspect I'll have the USB3 wake-up issue your build has fixed since I am using a wireless USB keyboard (Logitech kr400) with your custom OpenELEC build with your modified coreboot firmware standalone.
if enabling automatic updates doesn't pull down 4.1.2, then just update manually. The keyboard issues with ChromeOS' dev screen are completely unrelated to OpenELEC having disabled wake from suspend on USB3 ports prior to version 4.1.2. The former is a bug, the latter a deliberate decision due to issues with older Linux kernels.
Quote:I do have to run with software decoding, but all seems OK with 70-80% on both cpu worst case. The instructions on the Wiki for the hardware acceleration SW-filter workaround don't match up with the settings options I see. My system info is: xbmc 13.1 Git 84725b0 11JUL2014 build, OpenELEC 4.0.7-ChromeBox. Is this a problem with the workaround instructions on the wiki or did the script somehow download the wrong installer? I definitely have freeze jump ahead playback issues with the default hardware accelerations settings.
What are the codecs that are most problematic with software decoding?
make sure you have the Settings level (bottom left) set to Advanced or Expert, enable Hardware Acceleration, and then you will see those options.
CPU usage for software decoding is dependent on a large number of variables, the codec used isn't really one of them - it's the parameters therein.
Quote:Does this mean I can enable automatic updates on your custom build and install the 4.1.2? I'm a bit confused as what the script installed doesn't match the SW-filter harware accelerations workaround.
For OpenELEC, the script is only needed for the initial install (dual boot) or to create the initial install media (standalone). Updates are handled thru OpenELEC itself, either automatically or manually.