+is done transparently on the GPU. Input and output is 8-bit Y'CbCr by default,
+but be aware that 8-bit Y'CbCr, however common, cannot capture the full color
+fidelity of 8-bit RGB (not to mention 10-bit RGB). If you have spare GPU power,
+you can enable 10-bit Y'CbCr input and output with --10-bit-input and
+--10-bit-output, respectively, although you should be aware that client
+support for 10-bit H.264 is very limited. Also, Quick Sync Video does not
+support 10-bit H.264 encoding, so in this case, the digital intermediate needs
+to be encoded in software.
+
+
+Performance tips
+----------------
+
+It is strongly recommended to have the rights to run at real-time priority;
+it will make the USB3 threads do so, which will make them a lot more stable.
+(A reasonable hack for testing is probably just to run it as root using sudo,
+although you might not want to do that in production, but instead grant
+your regular user permissions in /etc/security/limits.conf.) Note also that if you
+are running a desktop compositor, it will steal significant amounts of GPU
+performance. The same goes for PulseAudio.
+
+Nageru tries to lock itself into RAM if it has the permissions to do
+so, for better realtime behavior. (Writing the stream to disk tends to
+fill the buffer cache, eventually paging less-used parts of Nageru out.)
+Again, this is something you can set in limits.conf.