Hap Player For Mac

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Hap
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Avi Player For Mac

[Update July 2018 – there is a new website with the latest information about the HAP video codecs: ] Today we are happy to share the fruits of a collaboration with Tom Butterworth that has been in the works for a while: Hap, a new video codec designed for digital video artists and VJs with the goal of achieving higher-performance video playback in OpenGL-based applications such as VDMX. Instead of using the CPU to decode video frames, Hap passes compressed image data directly to your computer's graphics card to perform hardware accelerated decompression of movies during playback. By shifting this burden from your CPU to your GPU, Hap makes it both possible to use more movies and work at higher resolutions than typical CPU-bound codecs. There are four different Hap codecs to choose from: Hap offers the lowest data rates for playing back the most clips at a time, Hap Alpha is similar to Hap with support for transparency, and Hap Q and Hap Q Alpha offer improved image quality at a higher data rate.

Getting started with Hap is easy: just download and run the latest installer for VDMX: Or visit the downloads page to find the standalone codec installers to use with other applications: Once installed on your Mac or PC, Hap, Hap Alpha and Hap Q / Hap Q Alpha will show up as options in the export panel in all your regular QuickTime applications. Find iphone from mac. More information on transcoding movies to the Hap format along with a standalone installer for the QuickTime component can be found in. We've also made some free a/v sample clips available for download in Hap at. Movies using the Hap codec will work in any QuickTime-based application, but Hap's hardware-accelerated speed gains will only be seen in apps that natively support it. This is why we're open-sourcing the Hap codec under the Free BSD License: it can be used completely free of charge by other developers of commercial and non-commercial software alike. More information can be found on the GitHub page: - if you want your favorite video application to support OpenGL-based image decoding, this is the link you should send them! When should I use Hap?

VIDVOX, LLC is a privately held, independent Mac software company based in the capital region of New York. Founded in 1998 we are focused on making outstanding tools for visual artists and performers around the world to realize their creative visions. Angelic Harp is an extensively sampled 47-string concert harp, played by harpist Alex Bigney from the Celtic group Kirkmount. We always aim to recreate the playability of the real instrument as closely as possible.

Hap Player For Mac

Will my hardware support Hap? For most realtime video projects, traditional CPU-based codecs such as Photo-JPEG or the Apple Intermediate Codec offer a reasonable tradeoff between image quality, CPU use and file size. However, when you need to play back a lot of movies at once — particularly if they are high-res — the CPU load may exceed the limits of your processors. These situations are where highly optimized codecs (like Hap) are most useful.

Video Player For Mac

On the Mac you will need to be running 10.6.8 or later, on PC Vista or newer — you don't need a super-fast computer, but you do need a fast drive for playback (preferably an SSD). Lastly, it's important to note that you'll only benefit from using Hap if your video application natively supports it: if you aren't sure, check with its developers before transcoding your clips.

If you want to see Hap supported in other QuickTime-based video apps, please ask its developers to check out Hap on, where we have simple sample code demonstrating its use. Thanks for taking the time to read about Hap. If you'd like to try it out here are links to sample clips in Hap at and which can be used with the! Or download the versions to transcode into other formats. And one more huge shout out to, without whom this would not have been possible.