Through Chrome

It’s impossible to expect every service to port their frontend to the Cast SDK, and for some services licensing issues might make that very difficult (Hulu, Amazon Prime, Vudu), or imposible, to say nothing about those who face technical restrictions (Flash). For that, there’s the other side of Chromecast, which works similar in practice to other screen mirroring standards (WiDi, Miracast, AirPlay Mirroring), and streams the content of a tab, and its audio, directly to the receiver. The plugin adds a Cast icon to Chrome, and there’s a tiny down arrow at the far right for selecting between current tab, audio mode, and if you’re lucky full screen (I don’t know why some see the full screen option and others don’t, neither my Retina MacBook Pro nor Windows 7 desktops see this option, but I’ve seen others show it).

 

There are three different options in settings for video quality, and since the video is encoded in software on the host, choosing between them will affect CPU use dramatically. I’ve backed out bitrates for the three settings: 5.0 Mbps for extreme (720p high bitrate), 3.0 Mbps for High (720p), 1.7 Mbps for Standard (480p), all seem to be VP8, especially given the fact that this is essentially WebRTC in practice.

There’s latency of about a second on the connection, and of course the occasional artifact during motion and a dropped frame or two (depending on connection quality), but it works surprisingly well.


HDMI Capture of Chrome Casted Tab

For a lot of services that don’t have Cast support this is the only way to get video across, it’s essentially AirPlay Mirroring but of a tab (or full screen if the setting is visible under that drop down). I’d love to see this functionality added to Chrome for Android or iOS if that’s possible as well, though those platforms really need VP8 hardware encode to make it tenable.

The First Mode - Cast SDK Conclusions
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  • yun - Tuesday, July 30, 2013 - link

    That's ok, they already know more about me than I do!
  • superflex - Tuesday, July 30, 2013 - link

    Precisely. More government data collection.
    Time to target those evil viewers of Fox News or Duck Dynasty.
    FU Google.
  • StormyParis - Tuesday, July 30, 2013 - link

    You're in luck: get a $50 USB stick (MK808...)
  • Aravot - Friday, August 2, 2013 - link

    I am using Android powered mini-PC MK808, bought it from ebay for $45 including shipping, works perfectly.
  • BryanDobbins - Saturday, August 17, 2013 - link

    like Lillian said I am startled that any body can profit $7923 in 4 weeks on the internet. did you look at this web site... http://xurl.es/qa0uk
  • Mikuni - Monday, July 29, 2013 - link

    inb4 $50 or more for Europe.
  • arnd - Monday, July 29, 2013 - link

    Interestingly, the /proc/cpuinfo output shows that the 88de3005 uses a single Cortex-A9 CPU core, rather than Marvell's own PJ4 core that is in the dual-core 88de3100 (Armada 1500).
  • rudolphna - Monday, July 29, 2013 - link

    lololololol I love your wireless network names/computer names. Skynet, l33tn3ss? Molybdenum? Lol awesome man.
  • Brian Klug - Monday, July 29, 2013 - link

    Ha, I'm glad someone liked those :)

    -Brian
  • dvinnen - Monday, July 29, 2013 - link

    I was planning to get one of these for traveling for work but you made it seem like a pain plus having to use a hotspot. It makes sense I guess and I didn't really think out that I wouldn't be networked to it over hotel wifi. I'll probably still get one to play around with though with it being so cheap.

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