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#webrender — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #webrender, aggregated by home.social.

  1. @wyatt Are you thinking of WebRender, which shipped in Firefox 91 for desktop Linux and Firefox 92 for Windows?
    wiki.mozilla.org/Platform/GFX/

    #firefox #webrender

  2. Huh
    So I went through all that trouble finding out how to get a #fbx (without using #Blender or #CATS plugin - despite how good it may be)

    to realize:

    #Sketchfab has:
    * limited uploads
    * displays #static models (not sure if I could embed an #animation
    * sigh

    Srsly ?

    My own #webrender split off can do more than that
    https://alceawis.de/mmdlatest.html

    What a waste of time :blobcathuggies_sad:
    BLEH !

    #DisappontedAo

    The processin on #sketchfab takes forever too.
    Are they struggling with my #pmx / #mmd ik bone names ? :AC_Isabelle_Laughing:
  3. GPU acceleration isn't always faster. Wayland is supposed to be faster because it utilises the GPU. Well, Firefox had the same idea with WebRender. Now, when I scroll on my poor laptop's Intel HD 4000, both Firefox and Wayland are fighting over GPU resources resulting in less FPS compared to X11. The CPU is almost idle. 😅

    #linux #wayland #firefox #webrender #intel #gpu #x11 #performance

  4. And yes, this is still all just to compile #Mesa so I can debug it in #GDB and figure out why #Firefox' #WebRender causes those funky artifacts on #Freedreno (#Adreno 306, #MSM8916)

    I have no idea what I am doing, really. If anyone has some secret #GPU knowledge, get in touch! 📐

    Maybe @mozilla or some of the great @thunderbird people? 🙏 Can't hurt to ask, right?

  5. Firefox bekommt eine native Unterstützung für macOS-Geräte mit Apples Silicon CPUs, und es gibt eine beschleunigte Grafik-Pipeline für Linux, Gnome und X11.
    Firefox 84: Native M1-Unterstützung und schnellere Rendering-Pipeline für Linux
  6. Firefox 84 Released, Enables WebRender by Default on Linux

    Mozilla Firefox 84 is now available for download. The latest stable update version of the popular open source web browser enables WebRender by default on Linux systems using Xorg, and is the final release to :sys_more_orange:
    #News #AppUpdates #AppleSilicon #Browsers #Firefox #Webrender

    :sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2020/12/mozill

  7. So finally i'm using #Ubuntu 20.04 on a #raspberrypi 4 wich means i'm finally using the so called "bloated" GNOME desktop.

    I... i am genuinely impressed, i... can't even believe this actually works nice, like...

    I'm using the Wayland session, the animations are surprisingly smooth, not the smoothest but i don't think i'm going to disable it because it feels good enough, since i'm using the 8gb model there's not a problem with the RAM consumption and Firefox 80 with #webrender enabled works nice, really nice.

    Any particular problem to point out?

    So far only pleasant things compared with Raspberry Pi OS. First, Flatpak is well configured and it doesn't show me any message like "applications will not appear in the menu because "n" technology is not well configured".

    The only thing that i might complain is the language configuration which doesn't seem to install anything outside english, i need the spanish language to use the spellcheck in Libreoffice, so i guess i'll install an extension.

    The GNOME UI is quite fantastic, compared with LXDE is nice as hell, it feels super comfortable and it genuinely surprised me that the performance is this good. I overclocked the Pi to 2 GHz and GPU to 750 MHz but even before the performance was nice.

    The installation process was kinda tricky, you can only install Ubuntu server but you can set up the whole desktop experience by installing the "desktopify" tool from github, the process was smooth and nice, yet it requires some knowledge.

    Well that's my report Joaquin xD..

  8. 📈Huge performance boost in Nightly with compared with Stable without WebRender. One of the goals of @GeckoView was performance. That is why this rewrite was needed. 👷🏼‍♀️🚀 testdrive-archive.azurewebsite

  9. After enabling in Firefox, the performance worsened! 😭

    Splitwise - 15 seconds (same as before)
    Scott O'Hara's webpage - 16 seconds (up from 12.5 seconds)

    Cache and other data was cleared completely before opening these.

  10. Firefox 69 for Linux: to bring even more performance boost.

    The recent release of Mozilla Firefox 68 brought in some nice performance improvements that Linux users can enjoy.

    Firefox 69 (now @ beta) opens up even better experience, including enabling WebRender on Linux.

    Firefox 69.0 is to be released on 3 September indeed with WebRender enhancements, disabling the Adobe Flash plug-in by default (finally!) +more.

    ==> techspot.com/downloads/2582-mo
    _
    #Firefox #Mozilla #WebRender #deleteFlash #Linux

  11. Firefox 69 for Linux: to bring even more performance boost.

    The recent release of Mozilla Firefox 68 brought in some nice performance improvements that Linux users can enjoy.

    Firefox 69 (now @ beta) opens up even better experience, including enabling WebRender on Linux.

    Firefox 69.0 is to be released on 3 September indeed with WebRender enhancements, disabling the Adobe Flash plug-in by default (finally!) +more.

    ==> techspot.com/downloads/2582-mo
    _
    #Firefox #Mozilla #WebRender #deleteFlash #Linux