Nvidia introduces RTX Broadcast Engine software with AI-green screen
NVIDIA is releasing a new feature that might appeal broadcasters, the RTX Broadcast Engine. With the development kit, streamers can dress their live streams in a rather virtual manner. thanks to an ai-green screen. Of course, you'll need a product with Tensor cores, so GeForce RTX is required.
Powered by dedicated AI processors called Tensor Cores on RTX GPUs, the new SDKs enable virtual greenscreens, style filters and augmented reality effects — the kind of techniques used by major broadcast networks — all using AI and without the need for special equipment. Livestreaming of video games has become a cultural phenomenon. Over 750 million people around the world tune in to watch people play video games. TwitchCon is where this global movement comes together. More than 50,000 streamers and fans will converge in San Diego this weekend to meet their favorite gamers and learn about the future of livestreaming. With the RTX Broadcast Engine’s AI-powered capabilities, NVIDIA is announcing a new way that RTX GPUs can enable more immersive livestreams — all without special cameras or physical props.
The new SDKs include:
- RTX Greenscreen, to deliver real-time background removal of a webcam feed, so only your face and body show up on the livestream. The RTX Greenscreen AI model understands which part of an image is human and which is background, so gamers get the benefits of a greenscreen without needing to buy one.
- RTX AR, which can detect faces, track facial features such as eyes and mouth, and even model the surface of a face, enabling real-time augmented reality effects using a standard web camera. Developers can use it to create fun, engaging AR effects, such as overlaying 3D content on a face or allowing a person to control 3D characters with their face.
- RTX Style Filters, which use an AI technique called style transfer to transform the look and feel of a webcam feed based on the style of another image. With the press of a hotkey, you can style your video feed with your favorite painting or game art.
In addition, NVIDIA is working with OBS, one of the leading livestreaming applications, to integrate RTX Greenscreen. With it, livestreamers will be able to remove their background environment or instantly teleport themselves anywhere — in this world or in virtual ones. This feature will be showcased at TwitchCon for the first time and available in the coming months.
In addition to RTX Broadcast Engine, leading applications such as OBS, XSplit, Huya, Douya and Streamlabs have deployed the NVIDIA Video Codec SDK for fast, high-quality streaming. Three new integrations made their debut this month:
- Twitch Studio, a new, easy-to-use application for new livestreamers currently in beta, has integrated the Video Codec SDK to enable high-quality livestreaming.
- Discord, the world’s leading gaming chat application, just released a new group broadcasting feature called “Go Live,” which uses NVIDIA GPUs and the Video Codec SDK to accelerate broadcasting games in Discord.
- Elgato is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of video capture cards for gaming. It recently integrated the Video Codec SDK into the software of its new 4K60 Pro MK.2 capture card for recording 4K at 60fps video in High Dynamic Range.
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Senior Member
Posts: 14091
Joined: 2004-05-16
Some of those features are pretty cool, but, you don't really need proprietary hardware and drivers to do them. Phones can do a lot of those things.
The part that really confuses me is why they're showing off the green screen. Background removal has been a thing for years, even in open-source software. If the green screen can work on a moving background, then I'll be very impressed.
I don't know how good the Nvidia implementation is but have you ever used any of the automatic background removers? I've tried several and they are all really, really bad. Pretty much everyone on twitch continues to use a greenscreen and chromakeying.
Senior Member
Posts: 7432
Joined: 2012-11-10
I suppose live/realtime background removers might be pretty bad; I've never used it myself and I never watched anything on Twitch (nor do I intend to). But I've seen plenty of pre-recorded content that does background removal and works perfectly fine; no AI required.
That being said, assuming Nvidia's "green screen" does yield better results than other realtime options with minimal effort, then sure, I suppose that's a nice feature.
Senior Member
Posts: 3405
Joined: 2013-03-10
Sounds like better use for the Tensor cores than a blur filter. I actually thought it's rather interesting gaming cards had the AI cores, it was just the price premium that pushed me off.
Senior Member
Posts: 1326
Joined: 2010-05-12
i wonder what are the specifics of an hardware tensor operation? what does it need to be faster at that a general purpose core does not do?
Senior Member
Posts: 7432
Joined: 2012-11-10
Some of those features are pretty cool, but, you don't really need proprietary hardware and drivers to do them. Phones can do a lot of those things.
The part that really confuses me is why they're showing off the green screen. Background removal has been a thing for years, even in open-source software. If the green screen can work on a moving background, then I'll be very impressed.