If next year they come out with a version with Wireless AC and the ability to use that for Wifi Direct to host computer w/o passing through the router, I'm IN.
It's pretty much impossible to use the streaming if you're on a college WiFi network right?
well... they already said they are making Shield 2
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=701128
I'm already happy with my Shield but for Shield 2 I want it to have Tegra 6 (nvidia saying it's on par with 360/Ps3) and better screen for gaming like Oled.
I think Wifi Direct will require another method or accessory like a dongle or something and I'm not sure if Nvidia will be doing that but it'll be good idea I guess.
dunno but yeah you need good wifi connection from your modem (you even need dual band one for good streaming) to have good experience so I think a college network will not do it.
First off, this is one of my more meaningless criticisms. But I don't like the way the system looks. It isn't meaningful, I suppose. But I very much think it looks bad. In fact I think it is one of the worst looking handhelds I have ever seen. I don't like the fact that the speakers have a metallic colour scheme. I think that the 'shield' on top is pointless and distracting looking. And the controller itself looks like the original XBOX controller, except even worse somehow. It looks strange and too large and generally completely awkward. I also don't like the default black colour scheme, too many electronics go for this. I like pastel colours, and I like the colour variation that, for instance, the Nintendo 3DS offers me. I have a light pink and white Nintendo 3DS and I wish that the Nvidia Shield looked more like that.
I don't like how it also seems too big. The thing seems big and heavy. I understand why they did it, they wanted to give it an extended battery life. But perhaps the technology just isn't there yet. And I would personally rather have a version of the Nvidia Shield that is less bulky and heavy and sacrifice battery life for it. The 3DS and PS Vita also aren't big and bulky. And that's one thing I prefer about them. I don't want to have to sit the object my lap to be comfortable. I can pretty comfortably held the PS Vita and 3DS for extended periods of time. But the Nvidia Shield just seems too heavy. Again, I would sacrifice battery life for this to be reduced.
Also, the largeness and bulk of the Nvidia Shield makes it about as portable as a tablet or even ultrabook
There are gaming tablets and ultrabooks out there. The Nvidia Shield is far too big for a pants pocket and is barely small enough for some purses. At that point, an ultrabook would probably achieve more in terms of portability. Again, if later models can achieve a size more similar to the PS Vita this wouldn't be a problem. The Nvidia Shield is current at a size you almost need to take it around in a backpack or purse. Which isn't optimal for a portable gaming system as you can already taking a gaming laptop of some sort with you in that fashion.
The button placement also doesn't seem perfect. The start button seems like it is in the wrong place. Of course, I'm going to have to admit now, I don't actually know any of this stuff other than how it looks firsthand, which is why I spent so much time talking about how it looks. I haven't had a chance to try it out, because I don't live somewhere that I can demo the device. But from what I have seen at least, the device seems far too big, bulky, heavy, and wouldn't be well suited to by hands.
Those are a lot of major negatives though it would be hard to say for sure unless I tried it personally.
I'd love to demo the device to see how much I personally really want it. But it isn't worth $300 for the device just to try it out and see how much I like it.
I suppose it is. And that's a good point.The main selling points is streaming PC games everywhere inside your house and having full controls layout for your android games. it's not for your tiny pocket.
I suppose it is. And that's a good point.
Though, personally, just for home use like that, I think I would rather have a tablet with buttons on it that it 10 inch rather than a 5 inch flip device. The Wii U controller is comfortable enough and if such a device had all of the functionality of the Nvidia Shield I think that would be more appealing than the Shield.
You can do the streaming that the Nvidia Shield does with a tablet and splashtop. And you can also do something like cook food in the kitchen while streaming your PC games via Splashtop. A router that will give low latency with the Nvidia Shield should also give low latency with a 10 inch tablet. And there are many stands for tablets as well as bluetooth keyboards.
I think that the PC stream angle of the Nvidia Shield would be more of a selling point if more than so few games were currently supported. And if such a thing weren't already so possible via other Android devices like tablets.
Also, yes the Shield is quite heavy. I was kinda surprised when I first got it. However, the weight is very well distributed, and it's highly unlikely you'll experience any fatigue unless you're laying on your back in bed and holding it up.
Is the phone Tegra 4? If it is, the answer is "maybe in the future".Is there any way to use GameStream on a phone with my own controller instead of on a shield, or do I have to just use one of the already existing solutions for that?
the weight is like the original Xbox controller I think but I got used to it in no time.
now the shape and the grips are absolutely fantastic and really help, Shield just destroys Vita and 3DS in comfort it's not even funny, I can't hold 3DS XL or Vita for one hours before feeling pain in my hand but with Shield it's exactly like holding a 360 controller and I can play for hours and hours.
Not if you use splashtop thd (which I believe uses similar tech to the current streaming solution). I too first thought the native streaming tech used by the Shield was superior because I had a pretty crappy experience with splashtop when I first tried it on my non tegra phone. After installing the latest update and seeing bitrates taking a nose dive and streaming framerates not holding a stable 60fps, I decided to try splashtop gamepad thd coupled with droidmote to emulate the 360 controller and man was I surprised at how much better the quality was. You also don't have to fiddle around with supported games anymore since what appears on your PC screen is streamed directly through splashtop. I only tested it with some emulators so there may be some games that might have issues when it comes to running full screen but so far, I just find it odd how a 3rd party app does much better than nvidia's own solution. Nvidia might have even had a hand in the development of the splashtop thd app since I remember them showcasing it before for streaming games from geforce enabled PCs.There's a difference in streaming via splashtop and streaming with the Shield. When streaming over the shield, the video card is doing all of the work on its own without a performance hit. Splashtop is using your CPU to capture that video, compress it and send it out.
Also, there is a "supported game list" that nvidia put out... and indeed it's quite small, mostly limited to the more popular recent games. However, you can also launch steam big picture mode, and launch and game or shortcut you put into steam. Some stuff is incompatible, but it boils down to stuff like resolution switching, or the game doesn't detect a controller input.
Also, yes the Shield is quite heavy. I was kinda surprised when I first got it. However, the weight is very well distributed, and it's highly unlikely you'll experience any fatigue unless you're laying on your back in bed and holding it up.
Like a Duke?
I tend to add weights to the controllers that support such things (like my mouse and a few of those third party controllers) because I like the heft.
Legit talk, if that feel is there that actually brings my interest up a fair bit. I worried that it would be too light.
You tried it with emulators only? Then the reason is simple, you arent taxing the host PC. Nvidia's solution is designed to have a minimum impact on the host PC by using a dedicated encoder found the newer cards.Not if you use splashtop thd (which I believe uses similar tech to the current streaming solution). I too first thought the native streaming tech used by the Shield was superior because I had a pretty crappy experience with splashtop when I first tried it on my non tegra phone. After installing the latest update and seeing bitrates taking a nose dive and streaming framerates not holding a stable 60fps, I decided to try splashtop gamepad thd coupled with droidmote to emulate the 360 controller and man was I surprised at how much better the quality was. You also don't have to fiddle around with supported games anymore since what appears on your PC screen is streamed directly through splashtop. I only tested it with some emulators so there may be some games that might have issues when it comes to running full screen but so far, I just find it odd how a 3rd party app does much better than nvidia's own solution. Nvidia might have even had a hand in the development of the splashtop thd app since I remember them showcasing it before for streaming games from geforce enabled PCs.
Yup, similar in both size and weights -and feel- to the Duke controller (it even got the long grips like the duke) if you like S controller or Duke you'll feel like home with Shield.
Does the touch screen emulate Mouse pointer?
I woudl really like to use this to play some Battlefield 4 sometimes but the goddamn game doesn't let you use a controller for the load out. You have to use a mouse. Everything else works find.
Yeah, pcsx2 and dolphin. I did also try it with RE 6 and it was still much better than native streaming.You tried it with emulators only? Then the reason is simple, you arent taxing the host PC. Nvidia's solution is designed to have a minimum impact on the host PC by using a dedicated encoder found the newer cards.
If I remember correctly, you can control the mouse using the right stick if you have the streaming menu up (else it will just act like the right stick for xinput controllers)Does the touch screen emulate Mouse pointer?
I woudl really like to use this to play some Battlefield 4 sometimes but the goddamn game doesn't let you use a controller for the load out. You have to use a mouse. Everything else works find.
I haven't tried streaming bf3 or 4 yet but if you have Steam, I don't see why it wouldn't work if you just add the game as a non steam entryLaunching BF4 via the Shield could be an issue due to the battlelog requirement.
I haven't tried streaming bf3 or 4 yet but if you have Steam, I don't see why it wouldn't work if you just add the game as a non steam entry
Oh is that it? I don't have bf4 yet but I always though bf3 would launch battlelog when running the executable (which should then open up a browser on Shield if launched through steam).I can only launch BF4 from battlelog in a browser - not from within the origin client or from an executable (neither of these options will even open battlelog). YMMV.
I guess you could try mupen64. The latest update seems to implement some updates from squarepusher (one of the retroarch devs).I'm hearing from the Retroarch forums that since the Shield update, N64 emulation is at a new level. Games like Conker run at full speed. Shadows of the Empire runs full speed as well. All with 0 frameskip, A GL codepath optimization from the update is said to be the reason.
Is a 802.11n dual band router a must for game streaming?
Anyone knows if I can somehow pair a PS3 control to the shield and use it for game streaming?
True dat. I love the streaming, but the emulation on this thing is perfect and the games look great on the screen. Super Metroid...![]()
Yes. Upping the game's resolution while streaming will effectively give you a downsampled imagequestion: games run in 720p right? as in 1280x720 on the pc even before streaming? is it possible to put supersampling in the game profile to clean up the image?
Mother of God, so there was some talk over at the nvidia forums regarding the compression artifacts while streaming pc games, some guy suggested using something called Splash top THD.
I reluctantly gave it a try and it is eons ahead nvidias implementation, barely any compression, consistent 60fps whereas the nvidias solution keeps struggling, almost never get disconnected, its just so ahead.
Gave a new life to my shield.
Any info on how to set this up? A walk through or a link would be appreciated.
This is what I followed, if you get stuck let me know and I'll help you, there are some steps that aren't well documented. http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=47009656#post47009656
Wait, if I am reading this right, you can do this with NON-Nvidia GPUs.
My buddy who has an AMD card was bummed he couldn't buy/use Shield.
AFAIK, normal splashtop can't do full screen streaming even if you have an nvidia card. The thd version was developed to get over that.I'm not sure but I think Splash top doesn't support full screen gaming on AMD.
I might be wrong though as it seems that with the new Android 4.3 you can use regular splashtop instead of THD.
I do have a rig with a 7970,so I will give it a try later and let you guys know.
AFAIK, normal splashtop can't do full screen streaming even if you have an nvidia card. The thd version was developed to get over that.
I guess the only issue with the splashtop route is needing to drop the xinput dll in the folders you want gamepad support. I may be wrong but that seems to interfere with native 360 controller support (I couldn't use my 360 emulated Dual Shock 3 controller without removing or renaming that dll)