... it appears that if you use a single encoding, OBS can't do that anymore. The only alternative I can think of is to write down the timestamp and then ffmpeg-split the results, which seems a bit onerous...
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... So I was wondering if perhaps there is a "start new file" thing that could be done somehow, to just tell OBS to start writing a new file now instead of appending to the old one?
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Nobody uses files anymore. Just push it straight to YouTube and split the recording there to new videos using the YouTube editor as you please after the face. You can timestamp it by sending a chat message on stream.
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This leads to so many things being broken, corrupted and not available anymore. What’s up with people thinking that internet is reliable? Writing files reliably to a local hard disk is an unsolved problem, and anything internet is orders of magnitude worse.
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If my 3 year old PC (i7-7700K, 1070) can stream and record separate compositions smoothly, seems like yours ought to be able too... I'm using NVENC 720p60 for both encodings.
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This machine is just a i7-7700K machine with no discrete GPU that just does streaming. So it doesn't have the ability to lean on the GPU for encoding, which means it will definitely be more limited. It's doing 1080p60 fine now, though!
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