Is the rest of Europe strictly metric, or are most countries a complete mess like this but just like feeling smug?
bisby
All Microsoft needs is a few award winning small dev studios...
Was watching a British show and they were describing things in inches.
America is very anti metric, but it's not like every other country out there is exclusively metric.
Watch the video. Ikea isn't even mentioned. There's a lot of explanations for a lot of different aspects.
The spacing is terrible. It's supposed to be one of those edgy things though.
You never know the day she has [planned(?)], maybe that's a date with destiny, and it's best to be as pretty as possible for destiny.
Pretty sure it's just missing 1 word the alternating lines and lack of punctuation make it hard to focus on even that though
The short version is just "She's all prettied up because maybe she has a date with destiny"
Wow. I did not know about the Torx security thing. It looks like the ifixit kits come with a torx security instead of a regular torx, so I never even noticed when I took my controller apart to replace a shoulder button. 🤯
I think that fire is plasma. Like water is liquid, ice is solid, CO2 is gas... fire is plasma.
It's not accurate and it's a bit rambly, but it's not an aneurysm happening.
I thought that passing everything through it would allow the USB to feed/write the video stream without any other processing
Unfortunately no. It captures the signal and turns it into something that the computer can digest, but the signal isn't something that just proxies straight through to twitch. OBS is always going to do some re-rendering.
A few tips:
If you open OBS settings, there is a "Output" section. You can change the output mode to "Advanced", and then select a "Video Encoder" ... this is where you would find NVENC (there might be a way to do it in the simple output mode too, but I dont have an nvidia GPU to confirm.
You'll most likely want to change the Output resolution on the "Video" section of the settings down to 1280x720. Twitch limits your bandwidth anyway, and people tend to find that 1080p at low bandwidth doesn't look any better than 720p at the same bandwidth (less compression artifacts because it doesnt have to compress as much, if at all)
Twitch has an option for bandwidth tests (or at least used to). This will make their servers accept the stream, but you don't actually go live on the site. You can use this to see how your computer handles the streaming. On the main OBS dashboard, you'll see a 30.00 / 30.00 FPS
in the bottom right corner (or whatever your resolution you've selected). There's also a CPU meter down there.
In the Docks menu there's also a Stats dock. It will tell you how many Frames are missed due to rendering or encoding lag. If you have 0 missed frames, then your PC is handling the encoding just fine. It will also list how many dropped frames due to NETWORK you've had. This would indicate that there is a problem between you and Twitch/Youtube on the internet. Your computer is rendering the frames just fine, but Twitch isn't receiving them.
Use the stats dashboard to figure out where you are losing frames and then fix that (if its rendering/encoding, then its NVENC or your CPU struggling. if its Network, then its your ISP struggling). And if you aren't losing frames, then you have nothing to worry about. This dashboard will also show you CPU and memory usage, but realistically, if youre using a 3080 with nvenc, those usages will probably be very low.
Even with the elgato doing "video encoding", how does it get to Twitch/Youtube? It doesn't do THAT kind of encoding. It's encodes the HDMI capture into a local format that is basically a webcam stream. It has to be broadcast from OBS. and even if you are using the Elgato as a video source, OBS is going to re-encode it into what it wants to broadcast. There isn't really getting around the video encoding cost of OBS, unless you have a device that streams to the internet directly from the capture card (which it doesn't seem like Elgato makes one. Someone else might, but that's not really what they are for)
They can. But Elgato also makes a "Camlink" in addition to the "HD60" series. And the Camlink dongles create a UVC device, which can be used as a webcam with no further tweaking necessary. Using a full desktop capture card for a webcam is slightly overkill, but absolutely works.
Streamers use a capture device to stream on a second computer, with an extra GPU so the stream doesn't interfere with their gaming performance. Don't want stream encoding to hurt your framerate.
I've never heard of anyone using a multiple device setup for internet bandwidth reasons (im sure its happened, but I would have to believe it's generally not the reason people use multiple devices)
tl;dw - MBS murders anyone who opposes him, so no one will tell him it's a bad idea (Jamal Khashoggi voiced opposition to the plan). Also, it's a bit of a stunt to attract tourists (compared to something like the Burj Khalifa) and has a bunch of promises that are just patently not viable, as opposed to an actually thought out project. ~24m into the video, the proposal for a circle is dropped in as a better alternative (albeit still crazy)