Yes, yes, I know, buy AMD, but I already have nVvdia to use CUDA, but this new patch on the nightly branch (on arch, you can use sunshine-git but with my patch here: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/sunshine-git) finally makes it so that I don’t have to “dual boot” into X11 to get game streaming at full performance.

Prior to this, wayland-based streamers had to make a round-trip through CPU ram, and now it stays within GPU ram and thus we can stream 4k on nvidia/Wayland!

    • @warmaster
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      411 months ago

      IDK, I can’t thank them enough for what they have done already. I’m just wishing it would be easier so it would be come more widely adopted.

      I mean:

      • Why doesn’t every open source game launcher include it?
      • Why distros don’t adopt this 1st class remote desktop tech?
      • Why most users don’t know it even exists?
      • Why hasn’t AMD baked it in their Windows drivers?
      • Why hasn’t it been included along the MESA drivers?
      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        i dunno if they could implement a reimplementation of nvidias protocol on the amd driver bundle on windows. i mean legally, could this have issues?

        and mesa is not for streaming software, its for drivers and sunshine is not a driver

        its already on flatpak, so on most distros repos by default

      • ferret
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        11 months ago

        Having to install the software is kinda the lowest common denominator in desktop computing, I think bundling it with things would be silly

        Edit: you mentioned you used arch. Sunshine is a mainline arch package, so you just install it and then start the systemd service. Can’t imagine it being much easier than that

        • @warmaster
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          111 months ago

          I did just that. Doesn’t work. IDK why.