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nickr
Retired Team-Kodi Member
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any Ubuntu variant will do the Usenet thing fine.
If I have helped you or increased your knowledge, click the 'thumbs up' button to give thanks :) (People with less than 20 posts won't see the "thumbs up" button.)
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Thanks for taking the time to answer, I was really looking forward to that.
I'm using wireless only in my apartment anyway, works like a charm with just a standard N router. You just have to position it/the antennas correctly and figure out the right channel.
Doesn't take too long to configure XBMC for the second time if you transfer your settings files. It just has to dl the plugin updates at first start and that's it!
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So steam in home streaming works OK for you over WiFi? I tried on my laptop with wireless n, maybe 3-4m away from router with a clear line of sight and I want getting lag of up to 10sec with borderlands 2. Haven't tried with wired.
OP a i5 3570 will play ps2 + Wii games at full speed so you may be able to with a i5 nuc, but its not a direct comparison as AFAIK nuc's have the mobile versions of the CPU.
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2014-05-01, 02:11
(This post was last modified: 2014-05-01, 02:12 by DJ_Izumi.)
I -do- use Steam IHS and XBMC, though my XBMC box is powerful enough that it plays games locally on it's own hardware. However my HTPC is in the bedroom, so I use my laptop to run Steam IHS on the living room TV sometimes. I think I can help answer.
Now, client wise, the laptop is just an i7 2630QM with just the Intel HD 3000 video hardware. This seems to be more than enough to be a Steam IHS client for 1080p gaming. I imagine you could use some pretty light hardware to act as an IHS client with all this considered. I'd love to hear someone report their experiences with like, an E-350 or something.
However my own HTPC, the A8-3870K with Radeon HD 6850, has previously proven to not have enough horse power to be a IHS server. At the time that I tested this, IHS did not support the Radeon GPU for video encoding, so the CPU had to do both video decoding AND run the video game logic, I didn't get over 20fps. Supposively, Radeon GPU encoding is supported now and just testing I got around 35-45fps with the A8 as server. When using my monsterly i7 4930K with Radeon HD 7950 as the server, I get pretty solid 60fps results, but that thing has CPU power to spare. Both server and client are on wifi and it 'mostly works' but the occasional hiccup is seen. I hadn't tested on Ethernet yet. If using Ethernet, you'd probably see some pretty spectacular results. Even on wifi I found shockingly little lag but there were certainly hiccups present.
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Well, a bit like DJ_Izumi, I have a monster IHS server and if I play on wifi only, I get max 10ms input delay and average 50fps which is fine on most games for me as I play from my bed with the Microsoft controller.
I would in no way competition FPS like this but it's a really nice option to have as my wife and I can then play some simple games like Sonic Racing, Lego... on sick days.
If I play on my tablet (Transformer T100) it's fine too but it depends on where I am located. I get some micro disconnections if I'm further than 30m from the router with some walls. It's perfect to play some Civ V during a trash movie for example.
As expected, the input lag goes lower with a wire between server and router.
Wifi n is more than enough for pretty much any Movie or TV show I watch, anywhere at home. As long as it's not a USB based adapter, it's fine.
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So how is this build coming along? Heat issues? Wifi issues? is everything ok in the streaming world?
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And this is why my box runs Windows 7. :X
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Yea, I would really highly recommend running Windows if gaming is important to you. Sure it'll work in Linux, but you'll probably work a lot harder to get it going in Linux than you will in Windows. It's almost plug and play if you're using Windows, and I don't know that you'll miss out on anything by not using Linux.