#Trinus usb tethering download#
Google for and download Trinus VR (server). Originally posted by Lord Tin Tin - Lord of the Dance:So arv, here is a quick guide. Elite Dangerous is amazing and GZ3Doom (google it) is great too (set it to SBS 3D in the console with the command VR_MODE 3) PPS - My rig is awful, yet I can get a nice VR experience on many games. PS - the Dev for Trinus is really approachable. You'll find that you'll almost certanly need to fiddle with the settings to get everything "right". Go ahead and mount your phone into your VR headset and enjoy VR. Ideally you want to use a gamepad to controll your game, mouse and keyboard will be a little tricky when you have the headset on. You should also notice that moving your phone will also move your mouse. Click on the windowed game and it should stream directly to your phone.
#Trinus usb tethering software#
You'll need to run your software in windowed mode, so make sure you enable that from the settings in your game. TriDef will enable "most" DX games to run in SBS 3D. Hopefully it should all work and you'll be tethered.
In the Video Tab you'll find an option called Fake 3D, if you have a game running in SBS (side by side) 3D, switch this to Disabled. The best settings to start out with are: in the Main Tab. On your PC, load up Trius and click on the "gears" icon - this'll bring up the options - switch it to Advanced mode. On your phone load up Trinus and switch it on.
#Trinus usb tethering Pc#
Make sure your phone is on your wireless network, disable mobile data, connect your phone to your PC via USB, then enable USB tethering on your phone. Given your rig, I'd reccomend you download the demo version of TriDef as well. Don't purchase Trinus until you know it'll work for you. Then go onto Google Play Store on your phone and get the lite version of Trinus VR (client). This one might actually work, but still a long shot.So arv, here is a quick guide. Start the PC server first and then the phone (reverse order to standard USB tether procedure). I’m hoping the subscription check would be made after you switch to tether, and maybe it will just let you go if it cannot connect… highly unlikely, but worth the shot.Īnother random attempt (with PDANet): try setting ports to 667 and 668, for video and sensor (ports below 1024 are reserved for certain tasks, so shouldn’t be used, but maybe PDANet lets you Trinus access through these).Īnd one last idea, while using PDANet tethering, set Trinus Gyre in router connection mode but changing the ip to 192.168.42.129. Just a silly attempt (no PDANet), Verizon is probably caching the subscription status and/or defaulting to block, but in case it is not: maybe you could try setting airplane mode first, then enabling usb tether. I’ve actually giving it some more thought while before posting, and have three different experiments to try (highest hopes on the last one):
I will investigate further, but since I cannot reproduce the scenario it is unlikely I will be able to find a solution anytime soon. I’m not sure what PDANet is doing internally to enable USB tethering, but I guess it does interfere with other apps connecting. I’ve been looking into this Verizon issue, I wasn’t aware some carriers restricted usb tethering (I’ll skip commenting on such policy).