![]() The higher bandwidth stream, the higher picture quality but since we're doing it all in real time that extra data adds on encode/decode time ie increasing latency. ![]() In regular networking you would be right but for game streaming the bandwidth is mostly there as a quality parameter. ![]() There should not be any reason why my speed is capped like this. It is too slow for most of my games, which basically makes it unusable. Originally posted by WrathOfSammy:The issue is not the visual quality. 4th generation and newer Apple TVs are supported. Sure you can have a 200mbps satellite connection, but the latency could be 5 seconds. To get connected with an Apple TV, download the free Steam Link app from the App Store and launch the app. The service hand-curates every title and has a conversation feature that lets you watch the content you love with the people you love. Satellite communcations are a good example of this. Mansa is a free video streaming service built by Black creators with a passion for making culture-positive content. Sure I could have a giant 1 ft wide hose (lots of bandwidth) but the latency is gonna suck because the molasses takes a LONG time to travel from the faucet to the end of the hose (terrible latency) If the hose is just regular water, the bandwidth might not be great (size of the hose) but the latency is good (when i turn on the faucet water comes out the other end fast)īut say that faucet had molasses coming out. Steam Link is also available on Android TV, Apple TV, select Smart TVs and other devices. Latency - how long it takes from when you turn on the faucet to when the water comes out the other end The Steam Link app is intended for game streaming over the home network unlike cloud gaming services like Nvidia's GeForce Now and Google Stadia. Latency - How long it takes for something from point A to reach point Bīandwidth - how much water comes out the other end Note Latency and Bandwiddth are 2 entirely different things Originally posted by slouken:Visual quality doesn't increase above 100 Mbps, and most encoders/decoders can't handle that high of a bitrate.
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