OpenRGB 0.8 Comes As Large Replace To This Open-Supply, Cross-Vendor RGB Lighting Software program
HARDWARE --

OpenRGB 0.8 was launched on Sunday night time as this undertaking’s largest launch ever and coming after practically one yr in improvement. OpenRGB as a reminder is the open-source, cross-vendor and cross-platform software program for RGB lighting management throughout many alternative units from GPUs and motherboards to keyboards and different lighted peripherals.

OpenRGB stays notably common with Linux customers given the dearth of vendor help for RGB lighting controls below Linux with the vendor-provided utilities whereas this open-source software program additionally works on macOS and Home windows too. OpenRGB may be considerably compelling the place desirous to handle RGB-lit units from a number of completely different distributors.

OpenRGB 0.8 brings help for lots of latest shopper {hardware}. There are particularly many alternative graphics playing cards with RGB lighting now managed by OpenRGB. There are numerous ASUS, MSI, EVGA, Palit, and Colourful graphics playing cards now supported past what was present in prior releases. Different {hardware} supported by this new launch embody further Razer units, MSI Mystic Mild controller enhancements, extra Logitech units supported, LIFX controller help for LIFX LED bulbs, NVIDIA ESA controller help, Gigabyte Aorus RGB DRAM controller help, some Acer screens, ASRock Polychrome lighting enhancements, Sony DualSense controller help, and Intel Arc A770 Restricted Version lighting help. A number of different {hardware} has additionally seen new help or enhancements to present help. The AMD Wraith Prism heatsink fan has additionally seen prolonged help to allow per-LED management on the ring zone.


OpenRGB

OpenRGB 0.8 additionally has enhancements to its consumer interface, the power to robotically generate udev guidelines, bug fixes, and all kinds of different enhancements.

Downloads and extra info on this large OpenRGB 0.8 launch by way of the undertaking’s GitLab.