Latest Comments by Kithop
New major version of OBS Studio recording and livestreaming software released
25 Apr 2016 at 4:33 pm UTC
25 Apr 2016 at 4:33 pm UTC
I'm still trying to get the NVENC support to work. Rather, to detect. Managed to hackily build a .deb for Ubuntu 16.04 off the master tree for ffmpeg with --enable-nonfree and --enable-nvenc tacked on the end. Have the required toolkit installed from nVidia, headers symlinked in /usr/local/include ... a bit of futzing around later with it not detecting libva properly (maybe just an issue from when I cloned master?), and I have working ffmpeg .debs!
I installed them! 'ffmpeg --codecs' shows nvenc in the list!
OBS still mocks me with 'Software (x264)' as the only encoder drop down. :( So now I'm thinking, great, do I have to actually build OBS from source too, so it detects my new custom build of ffmpeg? Oh, right, I need all the -dev packages that OBS depends on if I want to bui-
*fliptable* I'm not a developer, but a SysAdmin. This is one time I will say: BSD's ports system makes this so much easier. You pick your poison at configure time, and it always rebuilds from source.
If anyone figures it out, I'd love to know... and no, I can't redistribute the .deb files legally - hence the requirement for non-free. ;/ This is why we can't have nice things, like a PPA with NVENC-enabled ffmpeg builds, unless nVidia relicenses the required libraries.
95%+ sure that my next card (and potentially my next CPU!) are going to be AMD, so here's hoping for some love in the form of, say, AMD VCE support in OBS Studio? ^.^ Especially if it's exposed through the new-and-upcoming open source AMDGPU drivers. I'm so, so sick of binary blobs and stupid license incompatibility issues.
I installed them! 'ffmpeg --codecs' shows nvenc in the list!
OBS still mocks me with 'Software (x264)' as the only encoder drop down. :( So now I'm thinking, great, do I have to actually build OBS from source too, so it detects my new custom build of ffmpeg? Oh, right, I need all the -dev packages that OBS depends on if I want to bui-
*fliptable* I'm not a developer, but a SysAdmin. This is one time I will say: BSD's ports system makes this so much easier. You pick your poison at configure time, and it always rebuilds from source.
If anyone figures it out, I'd love to know... and no, I can't redistribute the .deb files legally - hence the requirement for non-free. ;/ This is why we can't have nice things, like a PPA with NVENC-enabled ffmpeg builds, unless nVidia relicenses the required libraries.
95%+ sure that my next card (and potentially my next CPU!) are going to be AMD, so here's hoping for some love in the form of, say, AMD VCE support in OBS Studio? ^.^ Especially if it's exposed through the new-and-upcoming open source AMDGPU drivers. I'm so, so sick of binary blobs and stupid license incompatibility issues.
I am launching a Patreon campaign to support me and GamingOnLinux
6 Mar 2016 at 9:28 pm UTC Likes: 1
6 Mar 2016 at 9:28 pm UTC Likes: 1
I was part of the previous pledge group, realised even after that stopped you're still putting out great content, even if I don't have the time to watch things like livestreams when they happen because of time zones and such.
Almost every time I find out about a new game or game being ported, it's links to this very site that I'm sharing with my gaming friends - one of whom has been frustrated with Windows 10 and actually switched almost full time to Linux, and another who is thinking of using a slightly older PC for Linux gaming. They ask me questions about technologies and games, and between here and Phoronix I feel like I'm up to date on the bleeding edge of what's new and upcoming.
Definitely resubmitted my pledge (up to 25 backers now!) - you do great work. :)
Almost every time I find out about a new game or game being ported, it's links to this very site that I'm sharing with my gaming friends - one of whom has been frustrated with Windows 10 and actually switched almost full time to Linux, and another who is thinking of using a slightly older PC for Linux gaming. They ask me questions about technologies and games, and between here and Phoronix I feel like I'm up to date on the bleeding edge of what's new and upcoming.
Definitely resubmitted my pledge (up to 25 backers now!) - you do great work. :)
STRAFE, an epic looking retro themed FPS coming to Linux in 2017
4 Mar 2016 at 6:21 pm UTC Likes: 2
*grabby* Waaaaant. :O
4 Mar 2016 at 6:21 pm UTC Likes: 2
Quoting: Foxv71Doom :) hahaWell, more like somewhere between Quake and Quake II, more accurately, here.
*grabby* Waaaaant. :O
Insurgency: Sandstorm realistic FPS announced for SteamOS & Linux, will use Unreal Engine 4
23 Feb 2016 at 5:28 pm UTC Likes: 3
23 Feb 2016 at 5:28 pm UTC Likes: 3
Completely unrelated, but I can't see the word 'Sandstorm' and not snicker any more.
View video on youtube.com
...and yet I can't not listen to it and bob my head. ;)
View video on youtube.com
...and yet I can't not listen to it and bob my head. ;)
Sol 0 Has You Colonizing Mars In This Strategy Game
2 Oct 2015 at 7:09 pm UTC
2 Oct 2015 at 7:09 pm UTC
Ooh. I absolutely loved playing that old Sierra 'Outpost' game many years ago, despite its flaws, bugs, and entire missing features, and was wondering if anyone else had thought of going the same route. One to keep an eye on, it seems.
Voxelnauts, A Sandbox MMO Built On Linux & Needing Help On Kickstarter
2 Jun 2015 at 8:21 pm UTC
2 Jun 2015 at 8:21 pm UTC
I'll admit, having hosted a lot of modded Minecraft servers, this sounds right up my alley, but at the same time, it's also... not quite.
Similar to the promised Linux version of Star Citizen, I'd rather host my own server, separate from the big 'MMO' universe, just for me and my friends to play on without worrying or dealing with any sort of online store or copyright issues ('you connect to my server and upload things, they're there for everyone else who's playing'). I wouldn't even want it to be 'attached' to the global MMO universe.
However, having an Oculus DK2, I'm torn here - a Linux-native VR game with support for it would be awesome... just as Oculus has dropped official support for anything but Windows for the forseeable future. Granted, the dev SDK in its current form definitely 'works', but for how long is yet to be seen.
I love the style, I love the idea, and the fact that they're developing on Linux, but some of the design choices are... not up my alley. Oh well.
Similar to the promised Linux version of Star Citizen, I'd rather host my own server, separate from the big 'MMO' universe, just for me and my friends to play on without worrying or dealing with any sort of online store or copyright issues ('you connect to my server and upload things, they're there for everyone else who's playing'). I wouldn't even want it to be 'attached' to the global MMO universe.
However, having an Oculus DK2, I'm torn here - a Linux-native VR game with support for it would be awesome... just as Oculus has dropped official support for anything but Windows for the forseeable future. Granted, the dev SDK in its current form definitely 'works', but for how long is yet to be seen.
I love the style, I love the idea, and the fact that they're developing on Linux, but some of the design choices are... not up my alley. Oh well.
New Linux Gaming Survey For April
7 Apr 2015 at 5:27 pm UTC
7 Apr 2015 at 5:27 pm UTC
The SteamOS / Steam Machine question was interesting... I was running Xubuntu 14.10 before, backed up my home folder and Steam library, etc., and then gave SteamOS a brief try. It's actually pretty slick, how they've done the dual accounts, full-screen Steam Big Picture mode on its own VT... but then I realised that like they have been insisting, it's really not a 'desktop' OS.
It is Debian-with-tweaks, but you can't simply Alt-Tab from your Steam game to your desktop to check a browser or messages - I have a dual-screen setup, and that took a bit of tweaking to fix the Steam mode (adding xrandr commands to the startup script to force one screen off; otherwise Steam was trying to centre itself across the middle of both displays)... but that means you couldn't, for example, have a browser on one screen while you're gaming away on the other.
If I were to get a big-screen TV, though, SteamOS actually seems fairly viable if your primary thing is gaming, with maybe a bit of YouTube using their built-in browser. I'd be tempted to try hacking together some sort of Kodi(XBMC) / SteamOS kludge and make a hybrid HTPC / gaming rig for the living room... I'd almost go as far as to say that's how Valve should be going. If you've got a decent gaming rig for Steam, it's more than enough to replace a Slingbox/AppleTV/Chromecast/etc. and there's some decent open source projects doing just that that they could try and integrate. One box to rule them all, sort of thing.
Of course, the community can always figure out how to do it ourselves, and I'm sure someone already has. :) The joys of open source!
Since I actually use that machine as my main desktop, though, I ended up switching back to Xubuntu, but rolling forward to 15.04 beta 2 since that's out this month anyway. Copied my home folder back across, and pretty much everything 'just worked'. I love that. All my settings, configs, profiles, just... dropped right back in as if nothing ever happened.
Unrelated: Though I'm running Intel + nVidia at the moment, in my heart I'm still rooting for AMD to come up with something awesome, particularly because they're working on (almost) fully open source video drivers for their upcoming cards. Being able to drop the proprietary blobs and still be fully supported like the Intel guys sounds pretty sweet, particularly with all this talk of Vulkan. AMD could do some real good for Linux gaming with that.
It is Debian-with-tweaks, but you can't simply Alt-Tab from your Steam game to your desktop to check a browser or messages - I have a dual-screen setup, and that took a bit of tweaking to fix the Steam mode (adding xrandr commands to the startup script to force one screen off; otherwise Steam was trying to centre itself across the middle of both displays)... but that means you couldn't, for example, have a browser on one screen while you're gaming away on the other.
If I were to get a big-screen TV, though, SteamOS actually seems fairly viable if your primary thing is gaming, with maybe a bit of YouTube using their built-in browser. I'd be tempted to try hacking together some sort of Kodi(XBMC) / SteamOS kludge and make a hybrid HTPC / gaming rig for the living room... I'd almost go as far as to say that's how Valve should be going. If you've got a decent gaming rig for Steam, it's more than enough to replace a Slingbox/AppleTV/Chromecast/etc. and there's some decent open source projects doing just that that they could try and integrate. One box to rule them all, sort of thing.
Of course, the community can always figure out how to do it ourselves, and I'm sure someone already has. :) The joys of open source!
Since I actually use that machine as my main desktop, though, I ended up switching back to Xubuntu, but rolling forward to 15.04 beta 2 since that's out this month anyway. Copied my home folder back across, and pretty much everything 'just worked'. I love that. All my settings, configs, profiles, just... dropped right back in as if nothing ever happened.
Unrelated: Though I'm running Intel + nVidia at the moment, in my heart I'm still rooting for AMD to come up with something awesome, particularly because they're working on (almost) fully open source video drivers for their upcoming cards. Being able to drop the proprietary blobs and still be fully supported like the Intel guys sounds pretty sweet, particularly with all this talk of Vulkan. AMD could do some real good for Linux gaming with that.
Star Citizen For Linux Is Being Held Up By Crytek
31 Mar 2015 at 8:33 pm UTC Likes: 3
31 Mar 2015 at 8:33 pm UTC Likes: 3
Well, the posting they had for a Linux dev at CryTek seems to be filled, so hopefully it means they're still working on it! ;)
Pillars Of Eternity RPG Released For Linux, Early Port Report Included
26 Mar 2015 at 10:37 pm UTC
26 Mar 2015 at 10:37 pm UTC
Random note re: tearing and VSYNC, too. I use Xubuntu, and I've found that regardless of whether I have XFCE's built-in compositor enabled or disabled, I'd always get tearing. Games, videos, whatever. I knew VSync wasn't working because every time I'd fire up EUIV, my video card would whine like crazy drawing some ridiculous numbers of frames at the main menu.
I forget where I saw it now, but I'd heard that using 'compton' as your compositor would help, and in my testing it actually works, or at least, it may be forcing Vsync always on. I just literally did an apt-get install compton, disabled XFCE's compositor, then you can background it by adding a startup/login item to run 'compton -b' (or run that on a terminal to test).
Whatever config defaults it ships with, at least in Ubuntu, seem sane enough (no wobbly/flaming/sparkling windows or anything gaudy like that), and it's fixed both video tearing (YouTube + VLC) *and* actually makes Vsync work in-game, without any noticeable performance hit that I can see.
YMMV, and I'm not entirely sure if this is an issue solely with multi-monitor setups on the binary nVidia blobs (GTX 980), but it works for me and may be worth a shot!
I forget where I saw it now, but I'd heard that using 'compton' as your compositor would help, and in my testing it actually works, or at least, it may be forcing Vsync always on. I just literally did an apt-get install compton, disabled XFCE's compositor, then you can background it by adding a startup/login item to run 'compton -b' (or run that on a terminal to test).
Whatever config defaults it ships with, at least in Ubuntu, seem sane enough (no wobbly/flaming/sparkling windows or anything gaudy like that), and it's fixed both video tearing (YouTube + VLC) *and* actually makes Vsync work in-game, without any noticeable performance hit that I can see.
YMMV, and I'm not entirely sure if this is an issue solely with multi-monitor setups on the binary nVidia blobs (GTX 980), but it works for me and may be worth a shot!
Why Are We Still Dual Booting?
12 Mar 2015 at 4:31 pm UTC Likes: 1
12 Mar 2015 at 4:31 pm UTC Likes: 1
I dual boot to play all the old games I bought before moving to Linux pretty much full time. And that pretty much means Skyrim, SimCity 4 (now moot with Cities: Skylines), and, uh, Star Citizen (that should be getting a Linux port later). Hmm.
To tell the truth, I spend more time patching Windows than using it for games now, so I guess I'm weaning myself off of it? But a lot of old games probably will never be ported, so it's nice to be able to still boot them and fire them up. The really *really* old games work in DOSBox, at least (yay GoG!).
Two other random things I've found I need Windows for, still? Ripping Blu-Rays with MakeMKV and re-encoding them with Handbrake because they only support the Intel QuickSync hardware H.264 encoder on Windows so my dad can watch his legally-purchased movies and TV shows on his iPad for flights. If you guys know of a way of getting both of those working with a 100% Linux workflow, then I really would touch Windows outside of patching maybe once every 3 months. ;)
To tell the truth, I spend more time patching Windows than using it for games now, so I guess I'm weaning myself off of it? But a lot of old games probably will never be ported, so it's nice to be able to still boot them and fire them up. The really *really* old games work in DOSBox, at least (yay GoG!).
Two other random things I've found I need Windows for, still? Ripping Blu-Rays with MakeMKV and re-encoding them with Handbrake because they only support the Intel QuickSync hardware H.264 encoder on Windows so my dad can watch his legally-purchased movies and TV shows on his iPad for flights. If you guys know of a way of getting both of those working with a 100% Linux workflow, then I really would touch Windows outside of patching maybe once every 3 months. ;)
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