Aspire E17 E5-773G-52PB discrete or GPU cards?

System
System Member Posts: 4,555 Seasoned Practitioner WiFi Icon
edited October 2023 in 2020 Archives
This discussion was created from comments split from: Aspire E17 E5-773G-52PB discrete or GPU cards?.

Answers

  • cuvtixo
    cuvtixo Member Posts: 5

    Tinkerer

    edited August 2020
    I don't know if its completely different in the e5-774G, I thought it might be the same, but... Mine has a Nvidia Geforce 940MX card, a discrete card with 2GB RAM hat can't be upgraded. But... 
    the Intel i5 7200u CPU has Intel HD 620 as part of the chip, with 1GB RAM so the system can be run with that, and you can even run the Intel Tuning utility and the important sounding "Intel Graphics Command Center". Nvidia has its own driver. I don't know if they switch off in Windows10, but in Linux I can get a notification when the graphics load is heavy, the system will switch from Intel to Nvidia. I figure "BSD" knows something about this ;). Probably it can do this in Win10 too, but they tend to hide all the lower level stuff. Trukntiger mentions an app control panel, but I think he has the situation a little backwards. Disabling "windows choice" is there to disable the Nvidia card! Intensive graphics take extra power, and someone looking to maximize battery life is going to want to stay with Intel graphics. There's really no reason to run Intel's virtual GPU, except to save power, and possibly if the laptop heating up became an issue. 17.3" isn't very lap friendly unless you have very big legs, anyways; I've never noticed the heat. This laptop would be very happy with an Intel chip without graphics, I assume that was the original plan and Acer got a deal on the Intel CPU chips with the graphics or something like that. It's funny to me that Trunktigger says "unless there is a performance problem with the intel solution...", I'm thinking exactly the opposite, unless there is a performance problem (namely power usage), there's no reason not to run the Nvidia 24/7. 

    I haven't used Photoshop or other Adobe programs for years, I guess a lot of the work is done in the cloud?  Anyways, video editing and pro animation might be helped by keeping the Nvidia on, but if you're in that business, you probably know that already, or even more likely use a different laptop.  Just FYI