Processor | Ryzen 5800x |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI X570 Tomahawk |
Cooling | Coolermaster Ml120 |
Memory | 4x8GB Corsair RGB Pro @ 3600 cl 16-8-20-16-30-58 |
Video Card(s) | Rtx 3090 |
Storage | Samsung 980 Pro, WD Sn350 |
Display(s) | OLED Samsung S90C 2nd gen |
Case | Fractal design Define r5 |
Audio Device(s) | Arctis Pro Gamedac |
Power Supply | Corsair ax1200 |
Mouse | Razer Basilisk V2 |
Keyboard | Corsair k90 RGB |
May I ask a genuine question... Since NV removed the nvENC limits a year or so ago, what is the point of continuing to patch the driver?Tested with same options as my last post with new 566.14 build (though I had to use the 566.03 NVEnc patch), also no issues.
@W1zzard thanks again for the test build.
Processor | Ryzen 7 5700X |
---|---|
Memory | 48 GB |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4080 |
Storage | 2x HDD RAID 1, 3x M.2 NVMe |
Display(s) | 30" 2560x1600 + 19" 1280x1024 |
Software | Windows 10 64-bit |
oh they did?Since NV removed the nvENC limits a year or so ago, what is the point of continuing to patch the driver?
I am a little wrong. I looked into it again and can see that they have twice increased the limits, the latest coming with advanced Twitch streaming... But I would think that these limits are more than reasonable for most people by now, even NV say that performance limitations will always constrain how many simultaneous streams the encoder can provide anyway...oh they did?
The new update will enable up to 8 concurrent encoding sessions, impacting nearly all NVIDIA GPUs, spanning across Maxwell, Pascal, Turing, Volta, Ampere, and, of course, Ada Lovelace. Interestingly, NVIDIA has updated the session limit to 8 for all GPUs except one. The GTX 1630 can only support 3 encoding sessions.