- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
Some Dell and HP laptop owners have been befuddled by their machinesā inability to play HEVC/H.265 content in web browsers, despite their machinesā processors having integrated decoding support.
Laptops with sixth-generation Intel Core and later processors have built-in hardware support for HEVC decoding and encoding. AMD has made laptop chips supporting the codec since 2015. However, both Dell and HP have disabled this feature on some of their popular business notebooks.
HP discloses this in the data sheets for its affected laptops, which include the HP ProBook 460 G11 [PDF], ProBook 465 G11 [PDF], and EliteBook 665 G11 [PDF].
āHardware acceleration for CODEC H.265/HEVC (High Efficiency Video Coding) is disabled on this platform,ā the note reads.
ā¦
While HPās and Dellās reps didnāt explain the companiesā motives, itās possible that the OEMs are looking to minimize costs, since OEMs may pay some or all of the licensing fees associated with HEVC hardware decoding and encoding support, as well as some or all of the royalties per the number of devices that they sell with HEVC hardware decoding and encoding support



Yeah, the licensing is BS but couldnāt they just tack on like 40 cents to the price or whatever? For a $900+ machine, it wouldnāt even be a rounding error.
Open codecs are better, yeah, but artificially crippling existing media workflows is kind of a dick move, IMO.
Thereās really no way to force change without somebody being a dick. The vast majority of people are barely aware that codecs are a thing, let alone know how the licencing situation works. If itās not the hardware vendors that push back, the status quo will go on forever.
Well they could not be dicks and fund and support open alternatives.
However this is just greedy corporations being greedy at the expenses of their customers.
The funding and support is not really the issue at the moment; itās getting the whole industry to change course that needs to happen. None of that will happen if everyone just goes along with the status quo. History is littered with technologies that failed, not because they were worse, but because the inferior option was there first, and nothing broke that technological momentum.
Ok, but again this is NOT trying to change the status quo.
Donāt be fooled.
I donāt need to be fooled/not fooled. The effect is the point and the motivation is irrelevant.
This is the whole āfree market capitalismā thing working as intended. One company wants money to use their patented tech. The other companies donāt want to pay, so they choose to not use the tech. For non essential goods and services, where free alternatives exist, I am perfectly fine with this setup.
Here we are, I feared exactly this answer.
Capitalism doesnāt fuel innovation, but only enshittification.
Iām sorry you havenāt realized it yet, because itās in front of our eyes everywhere we can look.
Absolutes donāt exist. And pure systems are doomed to failure. This is true when it comes to nature and itās so far proven true for every single socio-economic system weāve ever come up with.
Capitalism works great in specific circumstances. The lower the barrier to entry is, and the less essential the goods/services are, the better it works. But as I said, pure systems are doomed to failure. So pure capitalism, where corporations are allowed to own people and politicians, where thereās no accountability for anything, is doomed to the failure we see now. Itās a failure of the implementation as opposed to an inherent failure of the concept. Same with most previous attempts at communism. Most of those regims fell to a combination of implementation errors and external pressure, but that doesnāt prove that the underlying concept is bad.
That took a wildly unexpected turnā¦
Anyway, I hope youāll never be screwed like HP and Dellās customers.
Have a good day.