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Submission + - Valve: HDMI Forum Continues to Block HDMI 2.1 for Linux (heise.de)

emangwiro writes: "It looks like the battle for open-source HDMI 2.1 support isn't over yet. Reports indicate that Valve is actively trying to persuade the HDMI Forum to allow an open-source implementation of the HDMI 2.1 specification for Linux drivers. Currently, the HDMI Forum blocks public access to the spec, effectively preventing open-source drivers (like AMD's kernel driver used in SteamOS) from supporting features such as 4K at 120Hz and Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) over HDMI.

This bureaucratic roadblock previously forced AMD to abandon its own open-source HDMI 2.1 efforts in early 2024 after the Forum rejected their proposal. As a result, Valve's upcoming hardware—despite technically having HDMI 2.1 capable ports—is restricted to HDMI 2.0 bandwidth or forced to use lossy workarounds like chroma subsampling. While Intel has skirted this issue on some GPUs by using internal DisplayPort-to-HDMI converter chips (PCONs), AMD and Valve remain stuck in licensing limbo. Valve says they are 'working on trying to unblock things,' but for now, the closed-source nature of the standard remains a major hurdle for the Linux gaming ecosystem."

Firefox

Firefox Now Shows What Telemetry Data It's Collecting About You (zdnet.com) 34

There is now a special page in the Firefox browser where users can see what telemetry data Mozilla is collecting from their browser. From a report: Accessible by typing about:telemetry in the browser's URL address bar, this new section is a recent addition to Firefox. The page shows deeply technical information about browser settings, installed add-ons, OS/hardware information, browser session details, and running processes. The information is what you'd expect a software vendor to collect about users in order to fix bugs and keep a statistical track of its userbase. A Firefox engineer told ZDNet the page was primarily created for selfish reasons, in order to help engineers debug Firefox test installs. However, it was allowed to ship to the stable branch also as a PR move, to put users' minds at ease about what type of data the browser maker collects from its users.

Comment This is already there? (Score 1) 91

As far as I know dual audio has been available for a while. My old Samsung Galaxy S8+ could do it. My current Note 10 can also do it. Although I remember a colleague of mine with an iPhone couldn't do it even though the device said it supported Bluetooth 5.0 I assumed this was just Apple being Apple again.

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