Valve's New VR Streaming Trick Won't Just Work with Its Own Headset, But Other Compatible Models Can Too.
Valve has been touting its new streaming-first VR headset as a game-changer for the industry, but what's really interesting is how this technology is being adapted by other companies - and some of these models will be able to harness the full potential of foveated streaming.
The Steam Frame employs 'foveated streaming' which requests higher quality images where you are looking at. Foeated rendering in headsets like Apple’s Vision Pro takes advantage of eye tracking cameras.
Valve says it is not exclusive to its headset, though; Jeremy Selan, a hardware engineer for the company stated that foveated streaming can be employed with "any headset that supports eye-tracking" and compatible with Valve's Steam Link app.
The only limitation reported by the engineers was that foveated streaming won't work if lower level OS support is not available, as it currently has with SteamOS.
Valve has been touting its new streaming-first VR headset as a game-changer for the industry, but what's really interesting is how this technology is being adapted by other companies - and some of these models will be able to harness the full potential of foveated streaming.
The Steam Frame employs 'foveated streaming' which requests higher quality images where you are looking at. Foeated rendering in headsets like Apple’s Vision Pro takes advantage of eye tracking cameras.
Valve says it is not exclusive to its headset, though; Jeremy Selan, a hardware engineer for the company stated that foveated streaming can be employed with "any headset that supports eye-tracking" and compatible with Valve's Steam Link app.
The only limitation reported by the engineers was that foveated streaming won't work if lower level OS support is not available, as it currently has with SteamOS.