Simply put: Nvidia’s RTX Video Super-Resolution AI Upscaling Feature Now Built Into VLC Media Player, Allowing RTX 30 & 40 Series GPU Users To Harness The Card’s Processing Power To Add Visual Enhancements To Offline Videos .
Nvidia announced its upscaling technology in late February as a way to remove compression artifacts and other distractions from most online videos streamed using Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge. Make your videos look great using the card’s Tensor Cores and AI image processing. Now that it works with VLC media player, you can use the same smart features to upscale videos from your own personal library.
To enable Video Super Resolution, open the Nvidia Control Panel,[ビデオ設定の調整]under the section[超解像度]Check the option.
VLC was originally developed with a client/server infrastructure in place, but that functionality was eventually removed when it moved to a pure media player. It was released under the GNU General Public License in early 2001.
Have you tried Video Super Resolution in VLC media player? I don’t have one and I’m not entirely clear on how it works. Does that mean you need an internet connection? In other words, is 100% of the processing done locally on the hardware, or does it require a connection to an Nvidia server? If so, what is the purpose of the connection? Is Nvidia further training its AI on your personal video library?
I’m sure it works fine offline, but in this day and age, asking about privacy is never a bad thing.
Anyone who’s tried VSR, how was it? Is the improvement in quality as dramatic as Nvidia suggests? Are some content types better suited for upscaling than others? Any feedback? You are most welcome.
The latest version of VLC that supports RTX Video Super Resolution is available on the download page.