by Lee Mathews on February 25, 2011 at 09:30 AM

With an avalanche of Android tablets powered by NVIDIA's Tegra 2 on display at CES 2011, it stands to reason that game developers would start releasing titles which can tap the platform's 3D power. A search on the Android Market website shows that's now starting to happen.
Several Tegra-optimized HD games are now listed -- including Samurai II: Vengeance, Spectral Souls, Backbreaker ...
by Erez Zukerman on November 19, 2010 at 01:00 PM

Auto HD for YouTube is a fairly simple Chrome add-on, which has a similar function to the many Greasemonkey scripts that do the same thing: it makes YouTube default to high-quality playback. I've tried it out, and here are some quick thoughts:
No auto buffering: Sadly, this add-on doesn't change YouTube's default behavior, which is to just start playing the video rather than buffer and wait ...
by Lee Mathews on June 22, 2010 at 09:00 AM

It wasn't that long ago that VLC finally hit version 1.0. Since then, progress has been steady -- and today, version 1.1 is ready for download just two months after first going beta.
So what's new in VLC 1.1? First and foremost, hardware acceleration has arrived for VLC users who run Windows Vista and Windows 7 or Linux. MKV HD support has been improved, and VLC 1.1 can now play VP-8 and ...
by Sebastian Anthony on April 29, 2010 at 07:30 AM

Dubbed 'Gala', a new beta version of Flash for Mac OS X is now available. Adobe is quick to point out that it's aimed at developers, to make sure the player is compatible with content all over the Web, but there's no reason you can't jump in and test it yourself!
The hardware acceleration should work with all Mac computers that sport a recent NVIDIA graphics card (9400M, 320M and 330M). Also, ...
by Lee Mathews on April 16, 2010 at 09:00 AM

VLC is an excellent alternative media player, and one that's extremely popular with our readers. That doesn't mean it's issue-free, of course. VLC still struggles from time to time with high def video, though that's about to change with the upcoming 1.1 release.
Developers are hard at work bolting on GPU acceleration to the app, and the results look good so far. Forum user riderx's CPU ...
by Sebastian Anthony on March 16, 2010 at 12:43 PM

They've just showed off hardware-accelerated HTML5 at the MIX10 keynote, and it's damn impressive. Main points:
Full-screen, HD-encoded video on netbooks -- the keynote highlighted the dropped frames in Chrome, while IE9 rendered it fine -- made possible by the hardware decoder on the netbook.
Multiple HTML5 videos on one page? -- then they scroll the page down... and there are two HTML5 ...
by John Burke on January 5, 2010 at 07:10 PM

Skype has always been a pretty popular video conferencing program and is looking to keep the streak alive with high-definition video. The service recently announced that they will begin supporting 720p high-definition video conference calls, provided users have an HD webcam and enough bandwidth to handle it.
The new HD features come as part of the Skype for Windows 4.2 Beta. According to PC ...
by Jay Hathaway on November 13, 2009 at 08:00 AM

As consumer video equipment continues to get better and cheaper, high-definition video has become increasingly common on video sharing sites like YouTube. So far, YouTube will display HD video up to 720p, but the newest cameras offer even sexier 1080p video. Next week, so will YouTube, as it introduces support for "true HD." Your new HD video uploads will be viewable in their full 1080p, and any ...
by Jay Hathaway on September 11, 2009 at 03:00 PM

CBS, the parent company of Last.fm, is launching HD radio stations in the four largest US markets, powered by Last.fm. We've seen traditional radio stations go online before, but it's rare to see an online service take to the airwaves like this. The stations will play music based on Last.fm's weekly charts, which sounds like a Web 2.0 twist on the old call-in countdown votes on the radio stations ...
by Christina Warren on December 19, 2008 at 05:00 PM

Welcome to Googleholic, your sometimes weekly, often infrequent, fix of everything Google.
This week:
OpenSocial API adds hooks for My Yahoo! and other popular languages
Picasa 3.1 comes out swinging
iPhone and Android get optimized search results
Twitter connects to Google Friend Connect
Port your Google Webtoolkit app to Facebook in 10 minutes
YouTube goes HD
Chromeaholic: ...
by Brad Linder on February 18, 2008 at 07:00 PM

DailyMotion has joined the ranks of online video sites offering high definition content. Any time a user uploads HD content, DailyMotion will automatically encode to stream as a 720p resolution video. You'll need a computer with a fast processor and a fast internet connection to watch HD videos on DailyMotion. That's not particularly surprising, but we found that DailyMotion's HD videos were ...
by Jason Harris on January 17, 2008 at 12:00 PM

digg_url = "http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2008/01/17/miro-gets-refreshed-to-version-1-1-bit-torrent-dramatically-imp/"; The open source, cross-platform video platform, Miro, recently released version 1.1. The new update offers two main improvements. First, Miro has significantly improved BitTorrent performance by giving the user more control and settings for BitTorrent downloads. Miro's ...
by Brad Linder on December 4, 2007 at 03:08 PM

Adobe has launched a much anticipated update to its Flash video player. Adobe Flash Player 9.0.115.0 includes support for the H.264 codec. The upshot is that web publishers can easily embed HD videos on their site. One of the first web sites to do that is Hulu, NBC and News Corp's new online video site. Right now there's not much in Hulu's HD gallery. But if watching Alivin & The Chimpunks ...
by Brad Linder on October 16, 2007 at 06:00 PM

Online video site Vimeo has just launched a new "high definition" video player. Essentially, if you upload a video with a 1280x720 (also known as 720p) resolution, Vimeo will transcode that video and play it back at its native resolution. Now, this doesn't mean you're seeing the same video quality you'd get from an HDTV signal or a Blu-Ray or HD-DVD disc. Vimeo's still compressing the heck out ...
by Nik Fletcher on August 1, 2007 at 01:30 PM

Earlier in the year, on the Windows Media HD photo format. According to Computer Buyer UK, the JPEG group is now working on a successor to the venerable JPEG image format - and making extensive use of Microsoft's HD Photo standard within the format. According to the site, "JPEG says it has received assurances from Microsoft that it will make patents necessary for implementation available free-of ...