If stuck on limited bandwidth like I am often (stuck in hotels) it'd be nice to get more out of that limited bandwidth. Plex needs to update their setup and let us transcode in HEVC if wanted. But 4k DV HEVC to 1080p HEVC at 450 fps! Also the image quality of HW transcoding on the new chip matching HEVC software transcoding. I'm in the process of upgrading my server and library to the best quality of everything so maybe with all the 4k I'll start seeing more of it. I hadn't thought about the limitations of how many transcodes the VRAM could handle but honestly I don't know if I'd ever have 5 or 6 transcodes at once. You need two cards to capture and encode in pure hardware, or combine capture mode with another available HW encoder.This is very impressive performance. Note the capture cards cannot function as capture card and encoder at the same time. Hardware requirements: AVerMedia capture card (see list above), latest drivers. 1080p30FPS and 720p60FPS are supportedĪvermedia’s H.264 hardware encoder is available on the Live Gamer HD and Live Gamer HD Lite. Supported for local recordings in the latest 1.3 version. 30 FPS is the maximum supported frame rate Supported for local recordings and live streaming. Hardware requirements: AMD APU/GPU (see list above), latest Radeon drivers and Catalyst Control Center VCE (Video Codec Engine) is AMD’s hardware implementation of H.264 and is available in Trinity APUs, Tahiti XT GPUs (79XX, 7870 XT), Cape Verde GPUs (77XX) and the newer RX 200 series GPUs. ![]() Hardware requirements: NVIDIA GPU (see list above), latest GeForce drivers (min. NVENC (aka NVidia ENCoder) is Nvidia’s hardware implementation of H.264 and is available with all Nvidia GPUs starting from Kepler (GTX 650+). Supported for local recordings and live streaming Also, always install the latest Intel HD3xxx or HD4xxxx GPU driver from Intel’s driver page. Hardware requirements: Intel CPU, Sandy Bridge compatible motherboard with 圆8 or z67 chipset, or newer. Below is a short video that can be used to check if Quick Sync is available and how to activate it on desktops. ![]() ![]() On desktops, it may require additional settings. On laptops with Intel processors and a single discrete graphics card, Intel Quick Sync will always be enabled and ready. Quick Sync is Intel’s hardware implementation of H.264 and is available on most Intel® Core™ processors starting from second generation Sandy Bridge processors. In the event of an undesired performance hit when streaming using x264, hardware encoders are available at the expense of some image quality (and larger filesizes). ![]() For streaming however, it is recommended to use x264 as this will generally provide much better quality for the same bit rate versus hardware encoders. All hardware encoders are available for use with a free XSplit license.Īs a side note, hardware encoders enable users to record high quality videos with virtually no performance hit. As of now XSplit has support for all publicly and commonly available HW encoders counting Nvidia NVENC, Intel Quick Sync, AMD VCE and of course AVerMedia’s Liver Gamer HD (C985) and Game Broadcaster (C127). The following guide will give details on each hardware encoder and how they each interacts with XSplit products. With a variety of hardware encoders now available, it can be a bit confusing to know if you have the appropriate components to use these encoders, and how they are used with XSplit products.
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