OBS Studio 29 launches with AV1 encoding for AMD and Intel Arc
What you need to know The OBS Studio version 29 update has now hit the stable channel and is available to all. The headline new feature is AV1 encoding support for both supported
AMD Radeon and Intel Arc GPUs. NVIDIA 40 series cards already had access to AV1 but now all three GPU makers are included. Content creators that use OBS Studio have a little
treat in store as version 29 is now generally available. The open-source broadcasting software has many new features included, as always, but the headline feature is one that will
be of significance to owners of Intel Arc GPUs and AMD's latest Radeon releases. Version 28 had support for hardware AV1 encoding utilizing the new NVIDIA 40 series graphics
cards, version 29 brings that to both AMD and Intel users as well. Intel actually beat NVIDIA to the market with hardware AV1 encoding with the release of the Arc A380, and then
the subsequent launch of the A750 and A770. OBS support, however, was initially not available. OBS Studio 29 is now out!This release brings additional encoders, including AV1 on
the AMD RX7000 series and AV1/HEVC for supported Intel GPUs on Windows, and HEVC and ProRes support on macOS, as well as fixes for bugs and crashes.Full changelog:
https://t.co/tomxlPgOvnJanuary 9, 2023See moreHere are the highlights from the changelog as it relates to Windows users of OBS:Added support for the AMD AV1 Encoder for the RX7000
series GPUs on Windows Added support for the Intel AV1 Encoder for Arc GPUs on Windows (Note: CQP is available but not fully supported)Added support for the Intel HEVC Encoder on
Windows Added an upward compressor filter Added a 3-band equalizer filter Added update channels for opting into receiving beta/release-candidate builds to WindowsThere are a
number of tweaks and improvements added, too, and you can peruse the full changelog on the OBS GitHub repo. Windows Central's take: Ready for AV1 streaming when you are Twitch and
YouTube (Image credit: Windows Central)AV1 is a big deal, though right now it's not entirely useful. Content creators can use it and upload their content to YouTube, but right now
live streaming isn't supported. You would imagine it's only a matter of time, but that time frame isn't yet something we know. We do know that Twitch plans to support AV1 and
since YouTube already does, you would imagine it's a given that live broadcasting will be included at some point. The fact that all three GPU makers now offer hardware encoders for
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AV1 may also help to speed up the process. AV1 is a more efficient way of encoding video so it's also in the platform's best interests to get on board. In simple terms, AV1 allows
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