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Specifically, I'm running Mint 8 (Helena). I'm extremely new to Linux, and was searching for a solution that was user-friendly and GUI oriented. The box won't be used for much other than web browsing and word processing.

Anyway, it runs relatively smoothly, except for Youtube videos... especially full-screen, which runs at like 1 FPS, and even after closing, slows Firefox to a crawl until I restart it.

I'd seen an xkcd comic on the matter, but regarded it as a joke until now. Is this actually a problem? Are there any remedies I can try to smooth the applications?

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  • I suppose the problem can mostly be attributed to the fact that it's a really old box, and that ATI doesn't seem to bode too well with Linux (from a comment here, as well as a few other sources I had looked at).
    – Corey
    May 12, 2010 at 23:18

4 Answers 4

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No, flash is not typically slow under Linux.

Since you mention slow fullscreen video, are you sure 2D hardware acceleration is working in your setup? If it doesn't, software acceleration will be used, and it is much slower.

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  • As I said, I'm new. Could you point me in the right direction to troubleshoot this?
    – Corey
    May 10, 2010 at 19:34
  • 1
    Open a terminal. Type: glxinfo. You need these : * GL_ARB_multitexture * GL_EXT_framebuffer_object * GL_ARB_shader_objects * GL_ARB_shading_language_100 * GL_ARB_fragment_shader. If they are there, you will get the normal hardware accel perf.
    – Apache
    May 10, 2010 at 19:43
  • Also,there is a strange bug which I just found. bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/flashplugin-nonfree/+bug/… ... No comment. >.>
    – Apache
    May 10, 2010 at 19:45
  • @Corey: That highly depends on your hardware since it often requires specialized drivers. What graphics card do you use? May 10, 2010 at 20:09
  • @honk: ATI Radeon HD 4830. I (after much confusion) managed to install the drivers for the ATI 4800 series from their site last night.
    – Corey
    May 10, 2010 at 20:27
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I've had no problems with flash on ubuntu/suse releases in the last two years (can't remember before that :)

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  • Did you ever try it under Windows with a recent vga and with flash 10.1 ? ;)
    – Apache
    May 11, 2010 at 7:03
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Yes its slow. 32bit is better than the 64bit plugin though. 10.1 brings some improvements (mostly for 32bit), but still no normal performance. 10.2 MAY be the one which the Linux community wants. (Adobe have always been famous about their plugins on non-Windows platforms.. :))

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  • Really? I'm getting rocking performance with the 64-bit plugin for all but a few (badly-written, I suspect) apps. May 10, 2010 at 19:36
  • All apps are typically slower on Linux. There were some rants about this sometime ago. Anyway, I can understand that some of you write there are no problems with that which is obviously not true. Even if one have a good VGA card, a working driver (like I have a NVidia with latest NVidia binary driver), you wont even get close to the Win performance (or the usable performance). If I try to watch a movie full screen on youtube, it freezes my PC .. I can quit only if I tap ESC like some lunatic. On 32bit (i386) its much better, but still far from how it should be.
    – Apache
    May 10, 2010 at 19:42
  • shrug I have an Intel 965GM, and fullscreen video works fine at 1280×800. Take it as you will. May 10, 2010 at 19:57
  • Taking it. Have a NVidia 8600gts and a GTX card, Core2Quad EE cpu. 1920x1080. TOTAL FREEZE. (Everyone experiences this). By the way, Ubuntu installs 32bit plugin by default, so don't think if you used the package manager you got the 64bit. You have to fetch that by hand.
    – Apache
    May 10, 2010 at 19:59
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    I meant the linux flash player of course, nothing else. :)
    – Apache
    May 10, 2010 at 20:45
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I have seen in the past that Flash version on Windows use Hardware Acceleration. While the linux version lagged, and didn't use Hardware Acceleration. Could it be that the interfaces are just not there for this kind of thing to work on Linux?

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