A preliminary look at XCloud gaming streaming service for Windows, Microsoft

A preliminary look at XCloud gaming streaming service for Windows, Microsoft

A preliminary look at XCloud gaming streaming service for Windows, Microsoft


 Microsoft this week began testing (xCloud) gaming streaming service for Windows 10 pcs, and the software giant has made available a preview version, which allows you to broadcast Xbox games to the pc, for all its employees.

The Verge has been able to get exclusive images of how xCloud works on computers, and Microsoft has developed an Xbox Game Streaming app for Windows 10, according to a new report that will be available in the Windows Store.

The computer app supports the transmission of games from the Xbox One platform locally or remotely, instead of using Microsoft's xCloud servers, and requires an Xbox One controller connected via Bluetooth, a Microsoft account and a fast Internet connection, just like android and iOS versions.

But the ability of the application to broadcast is currently limited to a resolution of 720 pixels, and internal support notes from the company reveal that this internal preview version works at 720 pixels and 1080 pixels, and there is a variety of games available to Microsoft employees to test, 

The experience clearly seems to be ready for large-scale testing, and the experience is very similar to what is available on Android and iOS, including the user interface and the way games are accessed and broadcast, and microsoft is likely to introduce it soon to the xbox platform's external labits.
The company also previously updated xCloud servers to include eight Xbox One S platforms in a single server, after the server previously included four platforms (Xbox One S).

Microsoft is now converting xCloud servers into a next-generation, more powerful Xbox Series X processor capable of running four xbox one s games simultaneously on a single chip, and also has a new built-in software, to encrypt video six times faster than the current external software. that Microsoft uses on existing xCloud servers.

Microsoft launched xCloud this year, supporting a control arm (PS4), and the software giant is considering merging xCloud with Xbox Game Pass later this year, allowing players to stream games directly from the company's cloud subscription service.




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