I bet you read the fine manuals too, dontcha?
Lee
This may seem pedantic, but mp4 is a container that holds the video and audio streams. The actual video stream can be encoded im various formats (mpeg 2, h264, h265, etc). If you open vlc and look at the codec menu, find the video stream and report back the encoding type it may provide some insight. It could be that there's a performance regression with a particular decoder or maybe they changed decoding library or any number or things. Sorry it's a bit vague, but what I'm getting at is if we know the actual video encoding of the file it may help to track down the decoding performance issue.
If it does turn out to be mpeg2, it could be that something changed about how the video decoding drivers (kernel module) are loaded. Like maybe they stopped including them by default or are no longer being used for some reason.
If it's not mpeg 2, then could look in to decoder specific changes between distro versions or hardware support related changes (like maybe a kernel module needs an extra config passed to it to get better performance on 3b), or even decoder library config may be possible to tweak. Sometimes performance optimizations make things worse and the new default configs work better on newer hardware but worse for you.
In any case, I think knowing the specific video encodings would be helpful. I also just remembered that I had some performance issues on some files due to audio formats if I was having the Pi software decode vs connected to an external AV receiver that could decode the bit streamed audio data.
What encoding are the files? Given that it sounds like this is an old set up and maybe old files, some raspberry Pis and I'm pretty sure the 3b was one as I had one, did have support for hardware decoding mpeg 2 (maybe others, I don't remember), BUT this required purchasing a license for it. I never did, so idk what form the license came in. If it was a file on your SD and you don't have it on your new installs, that's my bet. Either that or newer software is more bloated or otherwise performs worse making the experience overall worse. Sometimes on old hardware, older software is the better choice (ignoring security of course).
Depending on your comfort level, you may want to do what I'm in the process of doing. I'm still waiting on parts, but this will work for my heating system.
I have old 2 wire thermostats in a few places I want to replace. I have hot water baseboard heat with multiple heating zones. I couldn't find an existing solution that worked the way I wanted and was reasonably priced, so I decided to make my own. This only works for single stage systems and for which exhaust fans, circulation pumps, or other components are controlled by the heating system generally and not by a single specific thermostat, which if you have those old mechanical 2 wire thermostats is almost certainty the case. You could do more sophisticated, but I don't need to.
All I need is a relay (controlled by HA) to simulate the thermostat turning on/off. I also need some way to tell it when to turn it on/off (such as a temp sensor), again lots of options with HA.
This can be done in a variety of ways, but I'm using nodemcu boards (they have wifi onboard) and esphome firmware. I've used this combination for a number of HA integrations so far. Near my boiler where all of the old thermostats connect will be a nodemcu board with multiple independently controlled relays (for each thermostat to control the individual heating zones).
The 2 wires that go to my old thermostats will be power supply for separate nodemcu boards, which will be in a 3d printed case along with buttons, display, and (in one room) will also include a temp/humidity sensor since I don't already have one there. The other locations already have more sophisticated air quality sensors that include temp/humidity, so no need to duplicate, although maybe I will for redundancy.
Do you play any games with kernel anti cheat? I assumed a lot of anti cheat systems would have dropped support for win 7 by now. I stayed on win 7 as long as I could (I had non gaming compatibility issues). I feel like it was peak windows. Had they put the win 10 performance improvements in to win 7, it would have been perfection.
It is. I remember reading it in a guide (pretty sure the one this screen shot is from as it looks very familiar). I was able to do it a couple times, but it required enough precision / luck that it wasn't worth doing IMO.
Idk if this covers your needs, but Home Assistant is non-cloud and supports voice commands. They're selling a voice hardware now (preview edition):
https://www.home-assistant.io/voice-pe/
While I've used HA for years, I've never tried any of the voice command methods, so can't really comment on it. I had just recently came across their voice hardware and am probably going to give it a try.
I also didn't want to try typing the name, search suggestion helped me. I played a couple of his games and they weren't particularly difficult, so I assume it's referring to his later games: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomonobu_Itagaki