You gonna be very upset when you realize that Fedora ditched support for some essential codecs for hardware acceleration on Intel Integrated Graphics and any forum won’t be able to help you properly. Bullshit experience. Arch is much better (btw)
In fact you can but this didn’t solve the problem. I installed all drivers possible but nothing fixed the high CPU usage when I opened some apps like calculator and Super Tux Kart for example. I have a Intel Nuc 12 gen and with arch is all working flawlessly
I’m sorry to hear of your bad experience. Four of my Intel/AMD workstations are running Fedora Silverblue and Kiniote and I’ve thankfully never experienced the same. Either way, I’m glad you’ve found some success with Arch. It’s still my go-to for the command line and all container work.
It’s largely a non-issue as you can easily install the patched Mesa from RPM Fusion, and I believe all Flatpaks incorporate the codecs already.
Don’t get me wrong, Arch is great and it will always have a place in my heart, but I also think Fedora is a top-tier project and I completely understand why they weren’t comfortable risking patent law unnecessarily.
I believe all Flatpaks incorporate the codecs already.
Flathub even has hardware decoding with the drivers they distribute. However, Flatpak applications need to specifically opt in to ffmpeg-full rather than the normal ffmpeg package, which has support for patent-encumbered codecs.
Fedora Flatpaks, on the other hand, have no such codec support.
Fedora is a top-tier project and I completely understand why they weren’t comfortable risking patent law unnecessarily.
I have to admit one of the first things I do when setting up a Fedora atomic distro is disable the Fedora flatpak repo and replace all existing apps with Flathub equivalents. Still, good info to keep in mind!
You gonna be very upset when you realize that Fedora ditched support for some essential codecs for hardware acceleration on Intel Integrated Graphics and any forum won’t be able to help you properly. Bullshit experience. Arch is much better (btw)
This is old news and long-since resolved by RPM Fusion and/or flatpaks.
In fact you can but this didn’t solve the problem. I installed all drivers possible but nothing fixed the high CPU usage when I opened some apps like calculator and Super Tux Kart for example. I have a Intel Nuc 12 gen and with arch is all working flawlessly
I’m sorry to hear of your bad experience. Four of my Intel/AMD workstations are running Fedora Silverblue and Kiniote and I’ve thankfully never experienced the same. Either way, I’m glad you’ve found some success with Arch. It’s still my go-to for the command line and all container work.
Why do we gotta be like this?
Fedora is fine, it’s the work of seconds to add non-free codecs.
You don’t even have to do that, if you use a flatpak.
Do you have a link that talks about this? What is missing?
They’re probably talking about Fedora dropping the h.264, h.265 and VC1 VA-API support back in 2022 for legal reasons due to patents:
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Fedora-Disable-Bad-VA-API
It’s largely a non-issue as you can easily install the patched Mesa from RPM Fusion, and I believe all Flatpaks incorporate the codecs already.
Don’t get me wrong, Arch is great and it will always have a place in my heart, but I also think Fedora is a top-tier project and I completely understand why they weren’t comfortable risking patent law unnecessarily.
Flathub even has hardware decoding with the drivers they distribute. However, Flatpak applications need to specifically opt in to
ffmpeg-full
rather than the normalffmpeg
package, which has support for patent-encumbered codecs.Fedora Flatpaks, on the other hand, have no such codec support.
💯
I have to admit one of the first things I do when setting up a Fedora atomic distro is disable the Fedora flatpak repo and replace all existing apps with Flathub equivalents. Still, good info to keep in mind!
Yes u can but this don’t solve the problem. You open calculator and your PC is 90% use and the fans are on maximum, lol.
I wasn’t aware the calculator app used h.264/5, what relevance is that?
is just an example. When I opened some random apps my cpu fan start to work and the CPU usage was about 85~90%