However dmesg outputs this, which doesn't look good: | 0 N/A N/A 2085 G /usr/lib/firefox/firefox 325MiB | | 0 N/A N/A 969 G /usr/bin/plasmashell 8MiB | | GPU GI CI PID Type Process name GPU Memory | | Fan Temp Perf Pwr:Usage/Cap| Memory-Usage | GPU-Util Compute M. | GPU Name Persistence-M| Bus-Id Disp.A | Volatile Uncorr. I doubt Shadowplay allows this natively.+-+ ![]() Lastly, OBS offers NVENC as an option for encoding, but it doesn't state whether it needs to be your main GPU, so that is why I am asking. I also do not have a modern intel CPU, either, so quick sync isn't available to me. The GTX 590, or the whole 500 series, for that matter, doesn't support it, it requires GTX 600+ If you have an AMD card but a modern Intel CPU with an iGPU then you can use OBS (need Intel drivers etc setup likely). ![]() Even if you could use a second card that would probably not benefit since the video would have to be sent over the PCIe bus to the second card somehow before being converted which would likely eliminate any benefit (though again I don't think it works). The performance hit is generally 5% at most. Since it sounds like you have a main NVidia card that supports Shadowplay already (GTX590) then why aren't you just using that? I thought it had to be done one the same card since it's sampling the video that the card is outputting.
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