Ok. I got windows 10. Nice OS , fast snappy and new and interesting ways to connect with xbox1.
So I tried streaming batman: arkham knight to my windows 10 intel i7-4500u cpu. My first impressions is that it doesn't really run that well. first time couldn't really connect, 2nd time connected, got really bad artifacts and video got choppy - and disconnected.
The xbox1 and ultrabook are both connected via Wi-Fi to an asus rt-n15 so not exactly the POS isp router. Just wondering if anyone has managed to get it working flawlessly?
The other thing I don't like is that while I can connect my xbox1 controller to the laptop with a micro usb cable, I need to manually resync it back to the xbox once its disconnected. Maybe it's an excuse to get the elite controller when it comes out...
need to give more time. itll be perfected in due time. now i believe microsoft is trying to fix extremely a lot of things since the feedback is now in after the upgrade.
Ok. I got windows 10. Nice OS , fast snappy and new and interesting ways to connect with xbox1.
So I tried streaming batman: arkham knight to my windows 10 intel i7-4500u cpu. My first impressions is that it doesn't really run that well. first time couldn't really connect, 2nd time connected, got really bad artifacts and video got choppy - and disconnected.
The xbox1 and ultrabook are both connected via Wi-Fi to an asus rt-n15 so not exactly the POS isp router. Just wondering if anyone has managed to get it working flawlessly?
The other thing I don't like is that while I can connect my xbox1 controller to the laptop with a micro usb cable, I need to manually resync it back to the xbox once its disconnected. Maybe it's an excuse to get the elite controller when it comes out...
Have you tried connecting the Xbox One with a network cable instead? The Xbox build in wireless might be at a bottle neck there it has to stream it to your PC at the same time access the internet connection?
This post has been edited by IccyAsd: Aug 4 2015, 02:35 PM
Have you tried connecting the Xbox One with a network cable instead? The Xbox build in wireless might be at a bottle neck there it has to stream it to your PC at the same time access the internet connection?
No I have not tried wiring up the xbox. I wouldn't have thought that the streaming/internet access would take up that much bandwidth. In any case, the mess of cables behind my A/V rack is putting me off from doing it.. Although it would be interesting to see someone else from the forums try it and report back here!
The xbox is basically my tv/Netflix machine now as I have hardly any time for gaming so far it's technically impossible to stream a game onto my laptop while the wife is on Netflix. The researchers at Microsoft need to work harder to fix that!
No I have not tried wiring up the xbox. I wouldn't have thought that the streaming/internet access would take up that much bandwidth. In any case, the mess of cables behind my A/V rack is putting me off from doing it.. Although it would be interesting to see someone else from the forums try it and report back here!
The xbox is basically my tv/Netflix machine now as I have hardly any time for gaming so far it's technically impossible to stream a game onto my laptop while the wife is on Netflix. The researchers at Microsoft need to work harder to fix that!
unless xbox1 is supporting 802.11ac otherwise better to wiring up
No I have not tried wiring up the xbox. I wouldn't have thought that the streaming/internet access would take up that much bandwidth. In any case, the mess of cables behind my A/V rack is putting me off from doing it.. Although it would be interesting to see someone else from the forums try it and report back here!
The xbox is basically my tv/Netflix machine now as I have hardly any time for gaming so far it's technically impossible to stream a game onto my laptop while the wife is on Netflix. The researchers at Microsoft need to work harder to fix that!
pretty sure its the limitation of the wireless, as example this would also happen the same way. "Transferring a 100gb file via Wireless to another laptop with wireless, stream 1080p youtube video & see the transferring speed goes down"
simple.. use wired (ethernet) as your conection. same goes with my plex server to shot 1080p HD to my tv need wired conection over wireless.
I think you guys are being a bit too obvious with the whole lan cable solution. Yes it's probably the cheapest and easiest solution but for quite a lot of us lan cabling is impractical and messy.
After googling, turns out Microsoft actually gives quite a lot of useful advice about game streaming over Wi-Fi.
I think you guys are being a bit too obvious with the whole lan cable solution. Yes it's probably the cheapest and easiest solution but for quite a lot of us lan cabling is impractical and messy.
After googling, turns out Microsoft actually gives quite a lot of useful advice about game streaming over Wi-Fi.
I think you guys are being a bit too obvious with the whole lan cable solution. Yes it's probably the cheapest and easiest solution but for quite a lot of us lan cabling is impractical and messy.
After googling, turns out Microsoft actually gives quite a lot of useful advice about game streaming over Wi-Fi.
i've tested game streaming from my xb1 through my windows 10 PC.. game tested gears of war multiplayer.. all connected to the internet via cable.. so far so good.. no input lag or what so ever..
i've tested game streaming from my xb1 through my windows 10 PC.. game tested gears of war multiplayer.. all connected to the internet via cable.. so far so good.. no input lag or what so ever..
i have tested too. with high quality streaming mode.