This is an amazing idea for a solution, just let one screen use the windows 10 device and the other screen use the xbox one!
Just please watch this video and share it around. - YouTube
Saw the video last night. Late night gaming you know! 
I think it’s really cool idea, I’m just a little worried about the stream lag that would most likely occur
This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
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> This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
Thank you. Wish there were more people who understood basic hardware in that awful splitscreen thread (where this thread belongs).
> 2533274896750290;4:
> This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
What role does the computer and its hardware play in W10 streaming?
> 2533274823519895;6:
> > 2533274896750290;4:
> > This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
>
>
> What role does the computer and its hardware play in W10 streaming?
Being a tv.
> 2533274913936758;7:
> > 2533274823519895;6:
> > > 2533274896750290;4:
> > > This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
> >
> >
> > What role does the computer and its hardware play in W10 streaming?
>
>
> Being a tv.
I was wondering more as to the specifics of the matter, but I guess it’s a moot point since I wouldn’t understand the technical details anyway and the end result is a glorified HDMI cord.
> 2533274823519895;6:
> > 2533274896750290;4:
> > This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
>
>
> What role does the computer and its hardware play in W10 streaming?
When streaming in W10, you just see what happens in the xbox in your monitor. If you plug-in a controller, you can also play from there.
> 2533274823519895;8:
> > 2533274913936758;7:
> > > 2533274823519895;6:
> > > > 2533274896750290;4:
> > > > This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
> > >
> > >
> > > What role does the computer and its hardware play in W10 streaming?
> >
> >
> > Being a tv.
>
>
> I was wondering more as to the specifics of the matter, but I guess it’s a moot point since I wouldn’t understand the technical details anyway and the end result is a glorified HDMI cord.
That basically is the specifics of the matter. Imagine you’re watching twitch on your pc. It’s essentially the same thing. Only instead of watching someone else’s stream from their computer, you’re watching your own stream coming from your xbox. The xbox still does all the processing work, all your computer requires is a media player that can view it.
> 2533274823519895;8:
> > 2533274913936758;7:
> > > 2533274823519895;6:
> > > > 2533274896750290;4:
> > > > This is not a solution, when streaming in W10, it’s still the xbox that is rendering the game. If 1 player is streaming and the other is in the TV, the xbox still has to render the game twice, which is what happens in split-screen.
> > >
> > >
> > > What role does the computer and its hardware play in W10 streaming?
> >
> >
> > Being a tv.
>
>
> I was wondering more as to the specifics of the matter, but I guess it’s a moot point since I wouldn’t understand the technical details anyway and the end result is a glorified HDMI cord.
Think of it like dual monitors on a pc. It’s the same concept. If the XB1 can’t handle splitscreen on 1 screen why would it be able to handle rendering 2 separate screens any differently? The pc hardware only comes into play for running the program being used to stream, not the game’s requirements.
The Idea is brilliant, and I have discussed it in 2 threads, which the mods don’t want, because they want the topic to die down, but I digress. The technology is already there, they just need to work with the windows 10 team and the x-box tech support team. They can make the rendering on an extra device work, without it being a separate copy of the game. They can easily distribute the computing load between devices. But take it from a guy with experience (and is also on the verge of getting banned for creating 2 threads talking about the same idea), this thread will be locked soon with the moderator message “Feel free to use the main thread” (Link to main thread here).
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> Oh god… where’s TheReaper9806 lol.
> Lazy link to video.
>
> Lazy link to splitscreen thread, where this belongs.
Nice to see you remember me, also that dude probably did that video after I talked about it in a separate thread, 2 for that matter, and no, the channel is not mine.
Am I missing something here, or don’t you have any idea how it works, no processing is handed over to the PC.
So 343 have said they can’t do split screen at 60fps, so assuming it’s a 1080p screen, that’s 2 screens at 960*1080. I’m assuming they split vertically having never played split screen myself.
So instead, you want it to kick out 2 screens at 1920x1080, that makes no sense and obviously won’t happen.
> 2535463106424241;12:
> The Idea is brilliant, and I have discussed it in 2 threads, which the mods don’t want, because they want the topic to die down, but I digress. The technology is already there, they just need to work with the windows 10 team and the x-box tech support team. They can make the rendering on an extra device work, without it being a separate copy of the game. They can easily distribute the computing load between devices. But take it from a guy with experience (and is also on the verge of getting banned for creating 2 threads talking about the same idea), this thread will be locked soon with the moderator message “Feel free to use the main thread” (Link to main thread here).
You can’t hand off hardware tasking over wifi or ethernet cables…maybe your threads keep getting locked because you’re just 100% wrong and keep insisting otherwise?
There’s a splitscreen thread for you people so you can all pretend you have brilliant solutions that the folks who made Win10 and the Xbox One somehow can’t think of in there.
> 2533274799325512;14:
> Am I missing something here, or don’t you have any idea how it works, no processing is handed over to the PC.
>
> So 343 have said they can’t do split screen at 60fps, so assuming it’s a 1080p screen, that’s 2 screens at 960*1080. I’m assuming they split vertically having never played split screen myself.
>
> So instead, you want it to kick out 2 screens at 1920x1080, that makes no sense and obviously won’t happen.
Only h2 splits vertically, every other halo did the much better choice of splitting horizontally.
Use the splitscreen thread please.