Hi Andreas
maybe you should just hang in there until Q1 2009 when, hopefully, Cyberlink will announce the ATI patch, and with luck that will have more functionality than the current CUDA patch.
I think the fact of the matter is that it's still early days for gpu encoding, even though the technology has existed for a while.
It's interesting to consider an AVCHD camcorder. The onboard image processor has to encode the video to AVCHD "on the fly" - and clearly there isn't the room or power available for it to use a Q6600 or even a QX9770. Besides which, neither of those processors would manage to do the encoding quickly enough anyway.
So, using a dedicated hardware encoder, the camcorder can do the task using much less power and with a far simpler and smaller processor. I suspect there is a certain amount of parallel processing used, though the manufacturers never seem to release much in the way of technical details.
When you compare the performance of the current generation of AVCHD camcorders with the previous ones, it's also clear that important developments and advances in image processing technology are being made - and still need to be made. That will hopefully reduce motion artefacts, for example.
Returning to encoding on a pc, when you consider the potential speed gains, there just has to be an increasing head of steam pressing for development, and the first software to feature proper implementation of GPU encoding will have a huge advantage over all the others. The encouraging thing is that thus far, Cyberlink seem to be ahead of the mainstream pack.
I think many people don't appreciate the scale of the speed gains possible. Whilst you might reduce your encoding time by a factor of maybe two or even three by opting for a very expensive top of the line cpu, the potential is for a tenfold or more speed gain simply by using a mid range gpu.
It's entirely possible that some owners of Extreme Edition processors will be mightily peeved if a "lesser" pc equipped with a relatively low-priced video card can encode video at many times the speed of their own system.
I'm all about "bang for your buck" myself, so I'm as anxious as you to see what Cyberlink can do with ATI AVT support, and hope that AMD work with them to bring it about.