Steam’s In-Home Streaming feature is now out of beta and available to all.

The feature allows users to remotely install, launch, and play games as though they were sitting at the remote PC. Keyboard, mouse, and controller inputs are automatically sent back to the remote computer.

Two computers running Steam under the same login on the same network should automatically connect to one another, and any game may be continued remotely right from where it was left on the main PC.

“Steam In-Home Streaming allows you to play your PC games on lower-end computers such as a laptop or home theater PC, or a computer running another operating system such as OS X, SteamOS, or Linux,” said Valve.

It is not yet possible to stream from Mac or Linux, and non-Steam games are not officially supported, although they may work. The main PC must be running Windows 7 or above.

Surround sound is not currently supported either, and is instead converted to stereo. According to Valve, streaming may not perform well when streaming to older systems with a single or dual core CPU and no hardware accelerated H264 decoding.