NVIDIA Graphics problem Nitro 5

Poul
Poul Member Posts: 1 New User
edited December 2023 in 2020 Archives
I know this has been discussed before, but no solution works for me.
I have some problems with Adobe Programs on my NITRO 5.
I discovered that Premiere is only using the built-in Intel GPU, not the NVIDIA card.
So I tried to deactivate Intel Graphics, after which the display became slow and very low resolution. When I rebooted the computer, it said that there is no display connected to the NVIDIA GPU.

I wonder why I am paying for a computer with an expensive GPU when the computer is not able to use it?
Or what is it that I am not getting?

Comments

  • andylb
    andylb ACE Posts: 3,827 Pathfinder
    edited January 2020
    It is an Adobe problem not a laptop GPU problem and has been discussed in many threads. Apparently it is how Adobe is built and the setting you changed was the default setting which is the Dedicated Intel GPU which for some unknown reason works best with Adobe. I would be getting on Adobe's back about fixing this ongoing issue. In reality the Nvidia card is primarily designed and optimized for gaming and not photo editing.

    Also disabling dedicated Intel graphics will cause problems. Your laptop is designed with 2 GPU's for a reason, the Intel takes care of routine tasks and is needed for correct system operation, so you can't just "disable" it. The correct method is to go into the Nvidia Control Center and under 3d settings tab/Program settings, you can select which GPU will run a specific game or program

    In the end it comes down to understanding that you bought a laptop primarily designed and marketed for gaming and that is the way it is built and optimized. Dedicated GPU for non gaming tasks and Discrete Nvidia GPU for gaming. I hope this has been of some help

    Please click YES if I answered your question

    I am not an ACER employee
    Thank you and have a blessed day  B)

    ★★ ACE Pathfinder 2019★★

  • andylb said:
    It is an Adobe problem not a laptop GPU problem and has been discussed in many threads. Apparently it is how Adobe is built and the setting you changed was the default setting which is the Dedicated Intel GPU which for some unknown reason works best with Adobe. I would be getting on Adobe's back about fixing this ongoing issue. In reality the Nvidia card is primarily designed and optimized for gaming and not photo editing.

    Also disabling dedicated Intel graphics will cause problems. Your laptop is designed with 2 GPU's for a reason, the Intel takes care of routine tasks and is needed for correct system operation, so you can't just "disable" it. The correct method is to go into the Nvidia Control Center and under 3d settings tab/Program settings, you can select which GPU will run a specific game or program

    In the end it comes down to understanding that you bought a laptop primarily designed and marketed for gaming and that is the way it is built and optimized. Dedicated GPU for non gaming tasks and Discrete Nvidia GPU for gaming. I hope this has been of some help
    Good explanation my friend.

    Poul make sure to update your graphic driver 
    windows 10/11 optimization guide for gaming 
    Windows 10/11 optimization guide for gaming — Acer Community

    My AN515-43 laptop UserBenchmark-
    https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/51514566
  • andylb
    andylb ACE Posts: 3,827 Pathfinder
    @GAMING6698 Thank you my friend

    Please click YES if I answered your question

    I am not an ACER employee
    Thank you and have a blessed day  B)

    ★★ ACE Pathfinder 2019★★