Here’s the scenario. Computer in the basement on fiber thruout the house. High end system with RTX 4090 GPU installed. MB is x670e based so has built in GPU as well. Have a KVM for video/keyboard/mouse. Low resolution monitor.
I want to remote edit content on my second floor on a Asus ProArt monitor. How would I remotely edit content on my other PC with say Premiere Pro running on the basement computer. This is HDR content in some cases by the way. I was thinking of using Moonlight to remote stream but not sure how that would work.
So I assume I need the computer in the basement to be presenting a 4k monitor? Perhaps need a 4k display emulator dongle? Or do I? I do have an issue which is probably new platform issues, where when I have a monitor plugged into the AMD motherboard displayport connector, and the emulator dongle in the RTX card the low res monitor in the basement is blank. Even though I have the built in one set in the MB as primary. Always goes to the “dongle”
Was thinking if I do need the emulator, if it makes sense to plug the low res KVM monitor into the displayport connector of the RTX and the dongle in the HDMI port so it thinks there are two monitors? One 4k.
Appreciate any thoughts.
9 Spice ups
The 4K emulators are great - not seen one that isn’t HDMI yet though.
Sounds like you might have some luck following the same path this guy took:
8 gamers one gpu - Search Videos Two Gamers, One GPU from your Windows PC! Hyper-V Paravirtualization Build and Tutorial - YouTube
He is using this method of virtualizing for gaming, but nothing says the software you use remotely has to be a game.
Hope this helps -
T
Optical thunderbolt with a dock on the 2nd floor?
To remotely edit content on your basement computer using Premiere Pro on your second-floor monitor, you can use remote desktop software like Moonlight. This allows you to stream your basement computer’s desktop to the second-floor monitor for remote editing. If you want to ensure a 4K display, consider using a 4K display emulator dongle. Connect the low-resolution monitor to the displayport connector of the RTX card and the dongle to the HDMI port. This setup should provide a 4K display and resolve any conflicts. For specific hardware-related issues, consult the documentation or seek assistance from the hardware manufacturer or technical support.