@Mikhail I'm trying to do my part. Problem is I just got offered 2x my current salary (this is a regularly occurring thing, say once a week on avg) most would go for that salary.
even if you don't get them jobs, there is untold value in just teaching people how to think. You know Aristotle taught Alexander the great, that's conquest by proxy.
I'd like to learn if there is a way to find if a process is communicating with a driver. Can I create a question for this on StackOverflow or should I ask it somewhere else?
Like I know practices in a single file code, but never really worked with multiple files, so how to organize files, what kind of abstraction to use, access specifiers and what and how to expose things, I hope you get what I am looking for
@Sailanarmo OpenCV uses FFMPEG. E.g., OpenCV CreateVideoReader: "FFMPEG is used to read videos. User can implement own demultiplexing with cudacodec::RawVideoSource".
At least in my experience, OpenCV is generally easier to use than FFMPEG. I haven't looked carefully to be sure, but at least looking at the FFMPEG docs, it seems like it probably provides more flexibility.
@JerryCoffin yeah I saw that too. Especially since OpenCV has C++ support and FFMPEG is used in Pure C. I was also going to say, OpenCV can read videos as well, so I am not sure what the point in trying to use OpenCV with FFMPEG is.
I don't know if our application is just stitching images together into a movie, which can easily be achieved within OpenCV. Or if it is converting a movie format to another, which is what FFMPEG seems to be the best at doing.
@Sailanarmo OpenCV supports computer vision. Some people want to do vision kinds of things on videos, so OpenCV supports at least rudimentary video manipulation. If your sole interest is in video manipulation, FFMPEG might be a better choice. Then again, as I said, I've found OpenCV easier to use, so if it supports what you need, it might be an easier way to do the job.
OpenCV undoubtedly does add some overhead, but in this case I doubt it's enough to be significant.
@JerryCoffin which what we are doing is computer vision. I don't think we are doing any sort of video manipulation. If I recall correctly, it's just so a user can record whatever image they are on, manipulate the image, and then export what they did to a video.
@JerryCoffin talked with boss man, it seems like it is for encoding decoding. It's essentially taking a series of .tif files, and compressing them into a video format.
@Sailanarmo You could undoubtedly do that with either, but if you're using OpenCV otherwise, it's probably easier to use it for this as well than to use OpenCV for some things and FFMPEG (directly) for others.
@Mysticial I did actually use it for years, apparently the fact that I had a ton of ventilation and was blowing at it hard in my old case kept it from dying
ironically one that should have been decently cooled?
but the entire VRM is basically junk at this point as best I can tell, you'd have to test every single MOSFET to check
I was expecting it to be a capacitor or something
yeah apparently the bios on that card was too aggressive out of the box or something? So EVGA shipped a new bios that limited the power more. Because I didn't have any issues of course I didn't know any of this until after the fact
apparently according to EVGA this is a known "Lifetime" style failure and not related to the thermal issue. Had it happened earlier they would have RMA'd it, but it didn't