Moonlight and Sunshine together are awesome, giving you a great open source way to stream games from one device to another and the latest Moonlight PC release brings in some big new features.
HDR is now supported on Steam Deck and other HDR-capable Linux systems using a new Vulkan-based renderer.
By default, the new Vulkan renderer is only used for HDR streaming, but it can be used all the time by setting the PREFER_VULKAN=1 environment variable.
By default, the new Vulkan renderer is only used for HDR streaming, but it can be used all the time by setting the PREFER_VULKAN=1 environment variable.
A new Metal-based renderer is now used on most macOS systems for increased streaming performance and reduced latency.
Both notched and notch-free native resolution options are now provided on Apple Silicon Macs.
There’s also a bunch of other Linux support improvements, some behaviour changes and plenty of the usual bug fixes.
The original article contains 258 words, the summary contains 116 words. Saved 55%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
HDR is now supported on Steam Deck and other HDR-capable Linux systems using a new Vulkan-based renderer.
By default, the new Vulkan renderer is only used for HDR streaming, but it can be used all the time by setting the PREFER_VULKAN=1 environment variable.
By default, the new Vulkan renderer is only used for HDR streaming, but it can be used all the time by setting the PREFER_VULKAN=1 environment variable.
A new Metal-based renderer is now used on most macOS systems for increased streaming performance and reduced latency.
Both notched and notch-free native resolution options are now provided on Apple Silicon Macs.
There’s also a bunch of other Linux support improvements, some behaviour changes and plenty of the usual bug fixes.
The original article contains 258 words, the summary contains 116 words. Saved 55%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!