Funny how sometimes one thing leads to another. I also have an asus laptop with an onboard intel graphic thing and a "dedicated' nvidia thing ( which turns out to be the chip that the OEM does stuff with through the intel GPU … namely, automatically using desktop simple stuff with intel settings (color, resolution, refresh rate, etc.) so that battery life and heat can be managed OK. The nvidia in my laptop is a way different animal than the one in my desktop. I was going to suggest to this poster that he should open his nvidia control panel by right clicking desktop, and discovered I COULDN'T FIND MY CONTROL PANEL and when I finally went to where it should have been in WIN 10, it told me my computer wasn't connected to an NVidia card at all ! OMG ! It was there a couple weeks ago, I'm sure. hehe.. So, this started a whole new avenue of discovery and FIXING stuff on my own laptop. Probably updates from windows and stuff messed things up. The solution for me was to disable the NVidia card, and THEN RESTART. And then enable the card. Since my Asus does not give me options to use ONLY the NVidia card, I don't have the option of getting rid of the onboard Intel stuff. So my choices in control panel are not the same as the choices on my desktop computer. There is one setting under PhysX or something that does enable global settings something or other, and that is basically the default I think. So, the bottom line is, if having trouble with laptop Nvidia stuff, a good idea is to see if it's even CONNECTED … hehe.. ( can open control panel )
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