HTPC Aspects : Miscellaneous Factors

In this section, we cover some miscellaneous HTPC aspects that are too short to warrant a separate section. These include a discussion of various display refresh rates supported, a short look at the hardware encoder (NVENC) in action and a summary of our thoughts on the GT 750Ti as a HTPC GPU.

Refresh Rate Accuracy:

NVIDIA provides an easy way to customize refresh rates. The process remains the same as what we explained in our review of the GT 640. The 23 Hz setting gives us a refresh rate of 23.971 Hz. With Intel providing rock-solid 23.976 Hz support in Haswell, it is time NVIDIA got the out-of-the-box refresh rate support correct.

NVIDIA also allows setting of refresh rates not reported as available by the display's EDID. On the Sony KDL46EX720, it allowed driving of 1080p50 without any issues. The flexibility is definitely appreciated, though it would be nice to have better accuracy without all the tweaking.

Hardware Encoder: NVENC

We used CyberLink MediaEspresso v6.7 to evaluate the hardware encoder block. Our test clip was a 3-minute long 1080p24 H.264 stream at 36 Mbps and the target was a 720p24 H.264 stream at 6 Mbps. The time taken for conversion and the power consumption at the wall during the conversion process are provided in the table below.

GPU Video Encoding Performance
  Conversion Time Power
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2:54 88.97W
NVIDIA GeForce GT 640 0:36 108.18W
AMD Radeon HD 7750 (VCE) 1:06 76.84W
Intel HD 4000 QuickSync (Better Quality/Fast Conversion) 0:24 63.91W

It appears as if the 750Ti is using the CUDA path rather than NVENC, while the 640 seems to use NVENC fine. We had readied ourselves for some quality comparison using objective metrics for the new NVENC. It looks like we have to wait for this issue to be resolved before proceeding down that path. [Update: NVIDIA got back to us indicating that this is a Maxwell-related driver issue. We are waiting for new drivers]

HTPC Verdict - Wait and Watch

We have taken a look at the HTPC credentials of the 750Ti and compared it with the GT 640 and the HD 7750. In terms of power efficiency, it is hard not to recommend the 750Ti. With a 60W TDP, it is amenable to passive cooling also. However, it comes to the market at a time when the HEVC standard has just been ratified (preventing it from having a full-blown hardware accelerated decoder) and HDMI 2.0 with 4Kp60 support being right around the corner. The perfect HTPC GPU would include support for both, but the 750Ti, unfortunately, is a bit early to the game. More troublesome is the fact that CyberLink's MediaEspresso seems unable to take advantage of the new NVENC and the fact that some of our 1080p60 H.264 clips are showing decoding artifacts (considering they play perfectly using the GT 640).

We would suggest HTPC enthusiasts to adopt a wait-and-watch approach to the GT 750Ti, particularly with respect to driver bugs specific to the 750Ti and also the extent of HEVC decode support that will be available. Depending on the requirements, it might also be prudent to wait for a Maxwell GPU with HDMI 2.0 support.

HTPC Aspects : Decoding & Rendering Benchmarks The Test
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  • texasti89 - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    http://media.bestofmicro.com/4/R/422667/original/F...
  • texasti89 - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    Also I was referring to the 750ti (60w) not the 750 (55w) in my comment. Words in the article reflect reviewers opinions. Benchmark results from various tech websites give same conclusion.
  • texasti89 - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    Another one to look at : http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/NVIDIA/GeForce_...
  • tspacie - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    [Coming soon to a flu near you]

    This is a caching error or similar on page 4, right?
  • mindbomb - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    Hello Ryan and Ganesh. I'd like to point out for your video tests that there is no luma upscaling or image doubling for a 1080p video on a 1080p display, since luma is already scaled. You need to test those with a 720p video, and they are mutually exclusive, since image doubling will convert 1280x720 to 2560x1440, where you will need to downscale rather than upscale.
  • ganeshts - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    Luma upscaling is present for 480i / 576i / 720p videos and downscaling for the 4Kp30 video. We have nine different sample streams.
  • jwcalla - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    I'd like to see AT adopt some OpenGL benchmarks in the future.

    Us OpenGL consumers are out here. :)
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, February 20, 2014 - link

    So would I. But at the moment there aren't any meaningful games using OpenGL that are suitable for benchmarking. After Wolfenstein went out of date and Rage was capped at 60fps, we ended up stuck in that respect.
  • Roland00Address - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    Feel better Ryan, don't let the flu get you down! (Or is it Ganesh T S?)

    Looks like Nvidia has a 8800gt/9800gt on its hands (for different reasons than the original 8800gt)
  • Hrel - Tuesday, February 18, 2014 - link

    Seriously impressive performance/watt figures in here. Makes me wonder when we're going to see this applied to their higher end GPU's.

    Looking at TSMC's site they are already producing at 20nm in 2 fabs. Starting in May of this year they'll have a 3rd up. Do you think it's likely May/June is when we'll see Maxwell make it's way into higher end GPU's accompanied by a shift to 20nm?

    That approach would make sense to me, they'd have new product out in time for Summer Sales and have enough time to ramp production and satiate early adopters before back to school specials start up.

    On a personal note: I'm still running a GTX460 and the GTX750ti seems to be faster in almost every scenario at lower power draw in a smaller package. So that's pretty cool. But since TSMC is already producing 20nm chips I'm going to wait until this architecture can be applied at a smaller manufacturing process. That GPU is in a media PC, so gaming is a tertiary concern anyway.

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