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Bir çeviri sorunu bildirin
1) wifi doesn't have the bandwidth to pump UNCOMPRESSED 1080p to your TV
2) An atom processor is unlikely to have the horsepower to decomress 1080p since it can barely do 720p
3) the latency would be terrile and the video quality would be terrible due to compression
You can stream 1080p compressed but for gaming you wouldn't want the latency associated with that so you'd have to stream some kind of uncompressed stream. Any 'real time' compressions schemes are not very good and how things look woudl highly depend on your CPU speed.
Note Online/Gaiki were streaming smeary messes to people. It worked ok as a demo but try imagining playig Dead Space with the GUI all smeared into oblivion. They also never really sloved the latency issues. Gaikai had a better buisness model of streaming demos for companies. Onlive as a 'direct to consumer' company was a lost cause.
some it-tech at my school got the nice idea to use an beamer 50m away of an pc over ethernet. not even wlan....and damn. the videosignal was behind the audiosignal more then 2 seconds....at 50 meters and ethernet, so no wlan. its the same with dlan....
so dont even waste the money and time on it.
I might do a tutorial on it at one point but for now I'll give you a few hints.
The Xbox and PS3 both have the capability to recieve DLNA streams, all you have to do is create a stream of your desktop for them to connect to. The answer here is VLC.
There is a latency though as VLC compresses and Xbox, PS3 (or in my case a raspberry pi and one of the new Intel NUCs) but if you fiddle with the screen resolution on your PC and the VLC settings its more than playable.
Then you just need a control input. I use an XBox controller with the wireless USB dongle thing and if I hang it over the edge of the landing onto the stairs it works fine.
Ill look into possibly doing a real tutorial at some point as if you fiddle with your router settings etc you can reduce the latency even more (either that or drag a network cable between your PC and Xbox but in that case why not just use a long HDMI)
If you're able to stream with acceptable quality and latency, please document your setup and share it here. I will be attempting this as well and I'll share the results either way.