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Orgin's Posts

Yeah the controllers are amazing really. Would be nice to be able to use them wirelessly going forward. I don't think they (or whomever the actual manufacturer is) would have any problems selling th... See more...
Yeah the controllers are amazing really. Would be nice to be able to use them wirelessly going forward. I don't think they (or whomever the actual manufacturer is) would have any problems selling them as a generic bluetooth controller for other gaming systems.
No I don't think the ESO+ will be refunded unfortunately.
I would say that Geforce now is the most similar one. And it supports both k&m and controllers. Works on chromebooks, pc's, linux, android devices, ccwgtv and so on. Just be prepared for a much much ... See more...
I would say that Geforce now is the most similar one. And it supports both k&m and controllers. Works on chromebooks, pc's, linux, android devices, ccwgtv and so on. Just be prepared for a much much worse user experience for the stuff that isn't ingame. (Website, store etc. Lots of login verification, queue times.. it's quite horrible until you get into the actual game)  The controller is still usable if you wire it up. But if you want to be wireless you'd have to get some other bluetooth controller unless google decides to unlock bluetooth on the stadia controllers before closing down (Extremely unlikely). Most of you gaming progress is lost however. At least for any game that doesn't employ cross save like The Elder Scroll online and Destiny 2. In some cases you might be able to use google checkout and install save games on a local pc. But probably not on any streaming services.
Yes don't worry. Just log into https://www.elderscrollsonline.com/ and link your account to steam and buy the base game for PC there.  You'll still have access to all you characters and all DLC tha... See more...
Yes don't worry. Just log into https://www.elderscrollsonline.com/ and link your account to steam and buy the base game for PC there.  You'll still have access to all you characters and all DLC that you have bought on Stadia. Nothing will be lost. You will be able to play on both platforms until it stops working on Stadia.   The  downside is that there is no other way to play ESO streamed so once Stadia is closed you will have to start fiddling with installations and such on all devices you want to play on. And no more playing on a tv, chromebook (Until steam is ready for chromebook), table or phone.
I'm sorry to hear that you are having problems. Stadia works perfectly for me however, with none of the problems you mention.
The issue remains unresolved.
It's related to linux and also a bit to the fact that Chrome does not support hardware decoding on Linux. There are patched chromium based browsers that has the necessary bindings for hardware decodi... See more...
It's related to linux and also a bit to the fact that Chrome does not support hardware decoding on Linux. There are patched chromium based browsers that has the necessary bindings for hardware decoding. Unfortunately the underlying software layer between the browser and the hardware is not well maintained. Even Ubuntu does not have the necessary stuff built in to make it happen (and again, nvidia is a complete no go, atleast with the official nvidia drivers). There are some guides that will help you set it up, but it will require some messing about in your system. So it's not Stadia itself that is failing. It's software support for hardware decoding on Linux that is failing. And with no entity (line canonical) willing to clean up the mess it's unlikely that things will improve any time soon.
Your computer probably uses software decoding of the video stream which takes a lot of CPU in higher resolutions. You really need hardware decoding for the best performance. Getting hardware decodin... See more...
Your computer probably uses software decoding of the video stream which takes a lot of CPU in higher resolutions. You really need hardware decoding for the best performance. Getting hardware decoding to work properly on linux can be a bit difficult. And if you have a nvidia GPU , impossible. Your only options then are to get a really beefy cpu to decode the video stream or to buy an AMD och Intel graphics card that can decode VP9 and/or H264 video. If you have an AMD or Intel GPU then you can google for a guide on how to get it to use hardware decoding.  
Just a long shot but if your age as set on your google account is below the minimum age on the game (Ghost recon and Assassins creed are both PEGI18) you can't start the game and they won't show up i... See more...
Just a long shot but if your age as set on your google account is below the minimum age on the game (Ghost recon and Assassins creed are both PEGI18) you can't start the game and they won't show up in the store any more. It recently happened to my daughter so perhaps this is your issue as well.   (It's a bit weird that Stadia doesn't show an error message when this happens so that people at least know what is happening. But it's a bit typical of Stadia I guess where they'd just rather people get upset for things not working all the sudden and stop using the service rather than giving them an explanation.)
You can use these two sites to keep track: https://esoserverstatus.net/ https://twitter.com/bethesdasupport?lang=en  
Please ... give us 60hz performance mode for The Elder Scrolls Online
I would say it's because on chrome os there's one party responsible for the whole software chain to get it working. On linux theres several different teams with different conflicting ideas and inter... See more...
I would say it's because on chrome os there's one party responsible for the whole software chain to get it working. On linux theres several different teams with different conflicting ideas and interests that are incapable of working together. I think the only way to clean up the total mess on linux is for an entity like canonical to bring out the "this is how it's going to be"- whip. But so far they seem totally uninterested  in making the likes of ubuntu into a viable gaming platform.
As I said in the other thread. This isn't primarily a browser issue. There are browsers you can install with hardware support enabled, but it still won't work because of the complete mess of the rest... See more...
As I said in the other thread. This isn't primarily a browser issue. There are browsers you can install with hardware support enabled, but it still won't work because of the complete mess of the rest of the linux hardware video decoding ecosystem. Read up about the sorry state of things here (Some info is outdated, but still): https://wiki.debian.org/HardwareVideoAcceleration You'd need an organisation like Canonical to go in and do some major asswoopin' to the involved parties to get this anywhere. Google isn't the correct party to blame for this mess.
I can play 1440p very well if I use the stadia enhanced plugin to force 1440p. It looks crisp, and the performance is super. But when I use the standard web ui I can't get it to use 1440p even if I s... See more...
I can play 1440p very well if I use the stadia enhanced plugin to force 1440p. It looks crisp, and the performance is super. But when I use the standard web ui I can't get it to use 1440p even if I select "Up to 4k", it always falls back to 1080p which looks horrible in comparison. If Stadia enhanced stops being developed I will be forced back to using a lower quality stream which would sink my enjoyment of the service to the bottom. 1080p does not look good on a 1440p monitor. Please please please make it possible to set it to use 1440p in the standard UI even if it (falsely) thinks that the client can't use it.
Getting a browser that supports hardware decoding is quite easy actually. The problem is that it won't be able to talk to the hardware of your NVidia card to do the actual hardware decoding. For tha... See more...
Getting a browser that supports hardware decoding is quite easy actually. The problem is that it won't be able to talk to the hardware of your NVidia card to do the actual hardware decoding. For that you need software between the browser and the card, and that's where the problem resides. The nvidia driver and vdpau stuff. The browser vendor unfortunately isn't responsible for the whole chain and thus can't fix it. And NVidia won't do anything from their end besides providing the necessary access to the hardware decoders, which the latest drivers do. And apparently the middle guys aren't doing anything about it either. So even if you manage to install a chrome browser that has hardware decoding enabled, it still won't work. Since chrome, vppau and the nvidia drivers won't integrate properly. You might be able to follow the NVidia parts of this guide (But read the warning below before you do) : https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/01/how-to-enable-hardware-accelerated.html?m=1 It has links to a ppa with vdpau stuff that supposedly is patched to be able to do hardware decoding. WARNING! It didn't work for me, perhaps it will for you. Just be aware that it may leave your system in a state where you can't play any video at all (like youtube) via your browsers. And backing out to fix it to a usable state may prove problematic.
I'm in the same boat as you. I've been trying all kinds of things to get hardware decoding to work with ubuntu and nvidia hardware.  Different browsers, different drivers, tons of different settings ... See more...
I'm in the same boat as you. I've been trying all kinds of things to get hardware decoding to work with ubuntu and nvidia hardware.  Different browsers, different drivers, tons of different settings and experimental stuff. The sad thing is that it just doesn't work. The software side for it just isn't ready or is just plain dysfunctional.
Okey, you still can't count out that your computer is too slow of course, but it seems unlikely. Most machines should be able to do 720p. So at this point you will have to keep searching for what it... See more...
Okey, you still can't count out that your computer is too slow of course, but it seems unlikely. Most machines should be able to do 720p. So at this point you will have to keep searching for what it is on your computer that slows things down. Is it overheating so it throttles the cpu to cool down? I had one laptop that I used a cooling platter on to keep it from being throttled. Stadia didn't play well on it without the platter. Any virus checkers that mess things up?  
Also, if you try the 720p mode and don't get the same problems then it's probably because your setup can't decode the stream in higher resolutions fast enough.
I'm on Ubuntu 20.04 and Stadia works (As in, it works right now) on all chrome based browsers that I have tried. (Chromium, Chrome and Brave) Perhaps some arch linux update borked up your setup some... See more...
I'm on Ubuntu 20.04 and Stadia works (As in, it works right now) on all chrome based browsers that I have tried. (Chromium, Chrome and Brave) Perhaps some arch linux update borked up your setup somehow?  
Don't know how to read your reply. Just to clarify, does the jerkiness happen when you capture a video sequence on the server side? Use the stadia built in feature to capture a short video sequence o... See more...
Don't know how to read your reply. Just to clarify, does the jerkiness happen when you capture a video sequence on the server side? Use the stadia built in feature to capture a short video sequence on the server side and then watch it to see if it has the same stuttering.