
- #WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP HOW TO#
- #WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP INSTALL#
- #WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP PATCH#
- #WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP SOFTWARE#
Once Trinus PSVR has been installed on your PC, the next step is to connect the headset and adjust the resolution settings – PSVR operates best at 1080p, so you’ll want to make sure that your display output matches this.

#WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP INSTALL#
#WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP SOFTWARE#
If the Oculus App does not work correctly, find and start the following Oculus executable from "C:\Program Files\Oculus\Support\oculus-runtime\OVRServer_圆4.The first step to using PlayStation VR is to download and install Trinus PSVR, the third-party software that allows your PC and your PSVR headset to ‘talk’ to one another. You do have to have a RDP session open while you use VR Desktop because the VR Desktop helper app starts in user context (or maybe because otherwise the display does not exist).ĭownload and install the Oculus Windows App. Now you should now be able to connect to the VM from within VR Desktop on the Quest. The VR Desktop App on the Oculus (which is the client) will use the Oculus account name to find it. Start the VR Desktop Streamer App for Windows (which is the server), enter your Oculus account name and save.
#WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP HOW TO#
If you do not know how to use SideQuest find one of the many good tutorials.ĭownload (from VR Desktop Website) and install VR Desktop Streamer App on the VM.
#WINDOWS 10 VR DESKTOP APP PATCH#
Select the data center, select Windows 10 Pro image and then click on "See all sizes":īuy and install VR Desktop on the Quest, from the Quest store.Ĭonnect the Quest to your PC/Mac, start SideQuest and install the VR Desktop patch (free). So you have to select "the best" data center first and then check, if a NV6 system is available in it. How to select a Azure Data Center Unfortunately, you can not (to my knowledge, if you know how, please write a comment) first select the desired size and then check in which data center it is available. At first I thought any NV system with GPU would work, but for example a NV4 does not seem to work. With Azure, the most complicated action for me was to find a data center with (available) NV6 systems, which have the right graphics card. You probably know more than I do about graphics cards and so you could also check other cloud providers and what they have to offer. Why use Microsoft Azure? Because I already had an account from other tests and documentation I found (see above) says that it can be done. You should check, of course, if that is still the case when you read this or if any new companies started such a service. If you want to do only very little, they will cost you more, though.Īfter some research, my initial idea was to sigh up with Shadow for a month, but then I found that the provisioning time to get a Shadow Cloud Gaming PC is currently about five (!) months (!).

Their benefits are fixed costs and ease of use. There is such as thing as a Gaming PC As A Service services. Check their libraries of games, maybe all you need is already there. Warning: latency when moving your head may lead to motion sickness, so be careful.ĭepending on what you want to do, you might not need this and may be better off with a "Cloud Gaming Service" such as Google Strada. Unless maybe you have a low latency line to Azure :- )

Why would anyone want that? Because there is quite a lot of VR software (games and other) that will not natively run on a Oculus Quest 1 or 2 and that do not actually have high demands in terms of graphics power or even latency.ĭisclaimer: this will not get you a Gaming PC for playing games that require low latency. So this is about having access to a "Gaming PC" without having to buy a Gaming PC.
