There was a rather significant release that occurred earlier this week that I ended up forgetting about, but it’s worth mentioning now even if I’m a few days late (whoops!). Adobe released its long awaited Flash 10.1 plugin. Before you say, “Who cares?!”, realize that this is the version that brings GPU acceleration into things. That’s right… the latest version (in beta) will allow you to run version Flash videos accelerated on the GPU rather than the CPU.
Right now, the acceleration is limited to H.264 encoded videos, but that’s hardly an issue given just how popular that codec is. The GPU acceleration isn’t just for the desktop either, but notebooks, and across all three graphics card producers. Yup, even Intel has added the support via its latest driver. There’s a catch though, and it applies to all three graphic card vendors. The card you have must be relatively recent in order for the acceleration to work.
For ATI cards, both the desktop and mobile parts need to be part of the HD 4xxx family, or higher, while on the integrated side, HD 3xxx and higher is supported. NVIDIA supports pretty much every GPU that’s been released since the 8000-series, including ION. For Intel, graphics chips part of the 4 series chipset family are supported. If you want to check the full list, or get additional details, you can download the official release notes (100KB PDF).
To make sure that the GPU acceleration works, be sure to download the latest possible driver from either vendor. ATI’s latest, and stable, Catalyst 9.11 is fine, but for NVIDIA you’ll need to download the beta 195.55 driver. For Intel, version 15.16.2.1986 or later is required. To take a look at some test videos while learning something about the new Flash, you can go here. The image I’ve posted below can be clicked to go to an H.264 YouTube HD video, in true 720p. Other 720p Flash videos are likely to also work fine.
I haven’t had the chance to test out the beta plugin yet, but I’d like to soon. I was hoping my “netbook”, the AMD-driven HP dv2 would be supported, but as it was built using an already-outdated GPU when I bought it this past spring, I’m out of luck. As far as I’m concerned, though, netbooks are the largest beneficiary of this feature. It’s frustrating to run a YouTube HD video only to have it lag like no tomorrow. I’m very interested to know if the latest drivers and plugin solve this issue, so if you test it out for yourself, be sure to relay your thoughts in our thread!
This public prerelease is an opportunity for developers to test and provide early feedback to Adobe on new features, enhancements, and compatibility with previously authored content. Consumers can try the beta release of Flash Player 10.1 to preview hardware acceleration of video on supported Windows PCs and x86-based netbooks. You can also help make Flash Player better by visiting all of your favorite sites, making sure they work the same or better than with the current player. We definitely want your feedback to help improve the final version, expected to ship in the first half of 2010.