NVIDIA has unlocked video encoding for GeForce, allowing for up to 5 simultaneous streams.
NVIDIA recently released an update to its GeForce GPUs that allows up to five streams to be processed simultaneously and removes restrictions on video encoding. This improvement opens up new access options for consumer graphics cards that were previously closed.
Prior to this update, NVIDIA GeForce GPUs could only process up to three threads at a time. However, after the upgrade, the company increased the number of streams to five at a time. The new improvement adds two more streams to the encoder. Current generations of GPUs since the Maxwell generation can handle a wide range of stream encodings including Pascal, Turing, Ampere and Ada Lovelace.
While the NVENC and NVDEC tables show each codec and video quality, they do not indicate the actual screen size they are tested with. Users should be aware that some GPUs are not supported and speed issues may occur when streaming up to five sources at the same time.
Thus, the update of NVIDIA GeForce GPUs allows you to expand the accessibility and increase the number of streams for video encoding. However, users should be aware that some GPUs are not supported and speed issues may occur when streaming up to five sources at the same time.
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